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Australian press slam Steve Smith over ball-tampering scandal

'Smith's Shame' - Australia media slam skipper
Image: Australia's Steve Smith has made front and back page news

Australia's ball-tampering is dominating the cricket headlines around the world and Down Under there is not much sympathy from the country's media towards captain Steve Smith and team-mate Cameron Bancroft.

Shock and shame appear to be the order of the day as Bancroft confessed to trying to use tape and dirt to change the condition of the ball on day three of the third Test against South Africa in Cape Town.

Here's what Australia's press have had to say:

THE AUSTRALIAN

"Smith's shame" cries the headline above an "ashen-faced" Smith as he left his hotel on Sunday. Cricket writer Peter Lalor calls it "the greatest scandal in the sport's history" as Smith and vice-captain David Warner stepped down from their roles for the fourth day of play in the third Test. Lalor goes on to say it is believed they will not return to their leadership positions for "sometime - if ever following the nation's shocked response". Comment from Patrick Smith also makes the front page, with the sports journalist saying the "cheating has hurt Australian cricket from helmet to boot".

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Steve Smith and Cameron Bancroft were greeted with loud boos from the crowd in South Africa

NT NEWS

Darwin's morning tabloid is sure to grab readers' attention with its humorous "Why I've got some sticky near my dicky" headline - alongside a picture of Bancroft trying to hide a small piece of yellow tape down the front of his trousers. Heads are expected to roll, it says, on what has become "cricket's darkest day".

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Rob Key believes Steve Smith should lose his captaincy of Australia permanently

THE COURIER MAIL

The Brisbane tabloid turns its focus to Cricket Australia with the blunt but catchy headline: "Show some balls". It says shocked fans are calling for Smith and Warner to be given the axe "for real".

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH

A one-word headline leads the front of the paper: "Shame" under a picture of the "sacred" baggy green cap, suggesting the enormity of the players' actions for bringing the "symbol of national pride and fair play into disrepute". On the inside pages, the incident is referred to as "Sandpapergate". Commentator Ian Chappell says Smith should not be the sole scapegoat for a "dark day in Australia cricket", while Robert Craddock says the scandal is the "culmination of a grubby win-at-all-costs culture finally crossing from self righteous rule-bending into a world of shameless, bald-face cheating".

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England's Stuart Broad says it's ironic Australia have complained about their treatment

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD

"Shame" reads again the headline in New South Wales. "'Same old Aussies, always cheating', goes the Barmy Army chant, and it's impossible to be offended now," writes Malcolm Knox. The commentator says this is cricket's "#MeToo
moment" and gives cricket the opportunity to "cleanse itself". "The first people Australian cricket should be hearing from are Michael Clarke, Ricky Ponting, Steve Waugh and Mark Taylor - 20 years' worth of captains - and their pace-bowling eminences, such as Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee, Mitchell Johnson, Ryan Harris and Jason Gillespie. From this group, we want the truth. Is this what Australian cricket is, and has been, about?," he asks.

HERALD SUN

"Sack them all", says the paper's headline as it calls for Smith's suspension from fourth and final Test on Friday to go one step further and see him fired "for good", as well as any other players who knew of the plan to "cheat". Writer Robert Craddock says Smith's reputation "will never recover" from the Baggy Green cheating scandal.

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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull reacted strongly to the cheating scandal

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