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Home > Sports News > Cricket News > Article > Steve Smith Win at all costs pressure led to tampering scandal

Steve Smith: Win-at-all-costs pressure led to tampering scandal

Updated on: 27 December,2018 09:29 AM IST  |  Melbourne
PTI |

Steve Smith is serving a one-year ban for his role in the scandal that forced a review of Australia's cricket culture. "I think back to Hobart when we lost there against South Africa [November 2016] and it was our fifth straight loss in Test

Steve Smith: Win-at-all-costs pressure led to tampering scandal

Steven Smith

Banned former Australian captain Steven Smith yesterday said Cricket Australia executives James Sutherland and Pat Howard played a key role in spreading the toxic "win at all costs" culture in the team that led to the infamous ball tampering scandal.


Smith is serving a one-year ban for his role in the scandal that forced a review of Australia's cricket culture. "I think back to Hobart when we lost there against South Africa [November 2016] and it was our fifth straight loss in Test


cricket I think after three Tests in Sri Lanka. And I remember James Sutherland and Pat Howard coming into the rooms there and actually saying 'We don't pay you to play, we pay you to win'," Smith, 29, Fox Cricket host Adam Gilchrist in an interview.


"So, for me, that was I think a little bit disappointing to say. We don't go out there to try and lose games of cricket, we go out there to try and win and play the best way we can." While Sutherland resigned from his position as CA chief executive after the incident, team performance head Howard was sacked last month after review by an independent committee.

In fact, Howard was one of CA's investigation team members that questioned Smith and other players in the aftermath of the scandal. "If you're talking about cultures and stuff, you only have to look back a couple of months before South Africa and we won an Ashes series here in Australia 4-0 and people are saying the culture's really good and everything's good," Smith said.

"So, you know, things can change really quickly. Obviously events that happened in Cape Town make people say that the culture was really bad. Personally, I don't think it was a bad culture," he added.

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