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Home > Sports News > Cricket News > Article > Ricky Ponting questions Sachin Tendulkars role in 2008 Monkeygate scandal

Ricky Ponting questions Sachin Tendulkar's role in 2008 'Monkeygate' scandal

Updated on: 17 October,2013 07:15 PM IST  | 
PTI |

Even as millions of cricket fans prepare to bid farewell to Sachin Tendulkar next month, former Australian captain Ricky Ponting in his book has slammed the little master and questioned his role in exacerbating the controversial 2008 'Monkeygate' scandal.

Ricky Ponting questions Sachin Tendulkar's role in 2008 'Monkeygate' scandal

The ghost of 'Monkeygate' has risen again with former Australian captain Ricky Ponting questioning Sachin Tendulkar's role in the scandal, claiming that he was taken aback by the senior Indian batsman's statement, which saved Harbhajan Singh.u00a0


In his memoirs -- titled 'The Close of Play' -- Ponting said he didn't understand why Tendulkar vouched for Harbhajan during the appeal hearing but did not say anything when match referee Mike Procter initially suspended the spinner for passing allegedly racial comments at all-rounder Andrew Symonds.


"I couldn't understand why Sachin didn't tell this to (match referee) Mike Procter in the first place," Ponting, captain of Australia at that time, wrote on the role of Tendulkar, who would retire from the game after his 200th Test next month.


Monkeygate scandal
India's Harbhajan Singh (2nd-L) and Sachin Tendulkar (R), hold a discussion midpitch with Australia's Adam Gilchrist (L) and Ricky Ponting (2nd-R) on day three of the second test match at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on January 4, 2008.u00a0Pic/AFP

Harbhajan was accused of calling Symonds a monkey during the 2008 Sydney Test and was suspended for three Tests. But he was cleared in an appeal hearing, conducted by Justice John Hansen from New Zealand, in which Tendulkar appeared as a witness and gave a statement in favour of the Indian.

Ponting is not the first cricketer to question Tendulkar's role in the scandal as retired wicket-keeper Adam Gilchrist had taken a similar view in his autobiography five years ago.

Ponting, in his recollection of the drama that unfolded, said he found it absurd when Harbhajan was merely fined after the incident, which threatened to hurt the relations between the two countries.

"Owing to an administrative error, the judge was never told about any of Harbhajan's past offences, which meant the penalty was way less than what it should have been," Ponting was quoted as saying in excerpts published by 'Daily Telegraph'.

"As I pondered this result over the weeks and months that followed, I started to think that I needed to be more savvy about the off-field politics", Ponting wrote.

"Maybe the Indian cricket juggernaut of the 21st century is too influential to shake. But then I thought about the way a number of people in the game had questioned our motives; how they thought we were just seeking an advantage rather than acting on principle," he added.

Ponting said the then Indian captain Anil Kumble's statement about the Aussies not playing in the spirit of the game damaged the team's cause. "...I felt that there was a lot of hypocrisy about the 'Monkeygate' scandal...Mike Procter heard all the evidence and found Harbhajan guilty. The next day, the Indians responded by threatening to go home," Ponting wrote.

"Because (captain Anil) Kumble's uncontested line about 'Australia playing outside the spirit of the game' received so much attention, quickly the belief spread that it was us, not Procter's judgement, that provoked the trouble," he said.u00a0

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