Fast bowlers Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins have issued a joint statement, after batsman Cameron Bancroft suggested other Australian team-mates knew about ball-tampering during 2018’s Test series against South Africa.
Bancroft and fellow batsmen Steven Smith and David Warner were banned for the incident. Those suspensions have since ended.
Starc, Hazlewood, Cummins and spinner Nathan Lyon were implicated, but ultimately deemed not guilty.
“We pride ourselves on our honesty. So it’s been disappointing to see that our integrity has been questioned by some journalists and past players in recent days in regard to the Cape Town Test of 2018,” read Tuesday’s statement via Starc’s website.
“We have already answered questions many times on this issue, but we feel compelled to put the key facts on the record again:
“We did not know a foreign substance was taken onto the field to alter the condition of the ball until we saw the images on the big screen at Newlands.
“And to those who, despite the absence of evidence, insist that ‘we must have known’ about the use of a foreign substance simply because we are bowlers, we say this:
“The umpires during that Test match, Nigel Llong and Richard Illingworth, both very respected and experienced umpires, inspected the ball after the images surfaced on the TV coverage and did not change it because there was no sign of damage.
“None of this excuses what happened on the field that day at Newlands. It was wrong and it should never have happened.
“We’ve all learned valuable lessons and we’d like to think the public can see a change for the better in terms of the way we play, the way we behave and respect the game. Our commitment to improving as people and players will continue.
“We respectfully request an end to the rumour-mongering and innuendo. It has gone on too long and it is time to move on.”