Shane Warne clashes with Marlon Samuels
Shane Warne and Luis Suarez victims of their success
The clash between Shane Warne and Marlon Samuels is definitely not the kind of thing you want to see on a cricket field.
Warne has already admitted that he overstepped the mark and I'm sure Samuels will do exactly the same once he has recovered from the eye injury he suffered later in the match.
Thankfully, these types of unsavoury incidents involving opponents are pretty few and far between but anyone believing this kind of thing will never happen again on a cricket field simply isn't living in the real world.
It needs to be understood that top class cricket is not a garden tea party - people's emotions do at times get the better of them in the heat of battle. It's a competitive sport, played by human beings where the stakes are high and at times tempers do boil over and players can lose their self control.
Whatever level of cricket you are playing at, these things unfortunately will happen because people are passionate and care about the result. Everyone has to understand they have a responsibility to uphold the spirit of cricket but at times it is easier said than done.
Sunday's incident involving Warne has become such a big story because of who he is.
I see a similar parallel here with the Luis Suarez handball incident against Mansfield. The Liverpool striker did what almost any other player would have done but because he is such a high-profile figure, and has a reputation for winning at all costs, the coverage has been blown out of all proportion.
England's road to 2015
England have only won one of their last 18 one-day internationals against India in India and will have their work cut out in the upcoming one-day series.
But the hosts are not playing great cricket at the moment, having been well beaten by Pakistan, and Alastair Cook's men should fancy their chances of causing an upset.
The bigger picture for England's 50-over side is to start building a squad for the 2015 World Cup in Australia and the decision to leave James Anderson, Jonathan Trott and Graeme Swann at home gives some of the younger players a chance to stake their claim.
In the bowling department, I'll be looking for Chris Woakes to make an impact as he looks to displace Tim Bresnan in England's best XI, while in the batting department Jonny Bairstow's misfortune through a family illness means Joe Root has a chance to prove himself as an international limited-overs player.
Did anyone really expect him to tell the referee that the ball had hit his hand? Would you go to the local police station and admit to the officer you'd been driving at 33mph in a 30mph zone?
Likewise, if one of the lesser-known Melbourne Stars players had confronted Samuels, I doubt we'd have heard as much about it, but because the clash involved possibly the most famous cricketer of modern times, it was always going to grab the headlines.
The whole affair is also indicative of modern cricket in that there are now so many cameras and microphones everywhere to pick up any indiscretion.
Ten or 20 years ago we wouldn't have been aware of something happening in a domestic game in Australia let alone had a player [Warne] hooked up to a microphone so we could hear his every utterance.
If players had been mic'd up in the 1970s and 80's, I'm sure the man bleeping out the swearwords would have been the busiest man in the ground!
During my career, I remember a particularly fiery match at the Adelaide Oval against Sri Lanka during a triangular series in Australia in 1999.
After Muttiah Muralitharan was no-balled for throwing by umpire Ross Emerson, Sri Lanka threatened to walk off in protest at what they felt was an unfair call and the atmosphere got very heated.
I told my opposing captain Arjuna Ranatunga that his behaviour that day was a disgrace and Darren Gough feigned a headbutt at Roshan Mahanama after the Sri Lankan deliberately obstructed his path to the ball.
It was the least enjoyable game I ever played in and though I cannot condone the conduct and behaviour of all involved it did show to everyone watching just how much the game meant to both teams.
Warne is a great competitor who plays cricket the way I like to see it played. He plays it very hard and stands his ground because he wants to make sure he gives himself and his team the best opportunity of winning.
When I played against him, anything that happened on the field, was never taken off the field and he would always be one of the first in our dressing-room after the match to shake hands and share a beer or an orange juice.
He has done so much for the game and promoted it in such a great way that this recent transgression is a small blip in a phenomenal career.
Warne has admitted his offence, paid his fine and served his ban and fortunately for all cricket fans, now that Melbourne Stars have qualified for the semi-finals, we can put aside any worries about never seeing him on a cricket field again.
Comments
Jump to comments paginationAll posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
More from Cricket
Elsewhere on the BBC
-
A novel idea?
How US libraries are responding to the change from printed books to digital publishing
-
~RS~q~RS~v=~RS~z~RS~16~RS~)

Comment number 133.
masterofpuppets10th January 2013 - 22:40
I don't give a monkeys who Warne is or care for his reputation, if he wants to resort to such behaviour. Great player in his day but known these days for advertising gambling websites and punching way above his weight with the female company he keeps. I would have loved it if Samuels had given Warne a very quiet 'Get you hands off me or I'll do ya'. Invade my personal space at your peril, Warne.
Link to this (Comment number 133)
Comment number 132.
Barrossa10th January 2013 - 22:08
John Welsh - if you don't give a hoot about Warne why did you read the article?? Ha
Link to this (Comment number 132)
Comment number 131.
Tom_in_Exeter10th January 2013 - 13:01
Warne described his stupid behaviour as "passion for the game". I call it a self-indulgent loss of temper that would be unacceptable in a 12-year-old. He was a great bowler - years ago. T20 allows him to carry on because the quality of the bowlers is irrelevant, only the slogging matters. I see that the Australian authorities have ignored Warne's kind offer to resume Test cricket - enough said!
Link to this (Comment number 131)
Comment number 130.
Zanderzelle10th January 2013 - 9:56
I could forgive someone for not admitting an accidental handball, but the incident against Ghana in 2010 was digusting. Not only did he cheat he did his "who me?" act when he was caught. He should have just caught the ball and walked off the field without waiting to see the red card! Seeing him celebrate the missed penalty sealed my opinion of him. Warne is awesome though. Great commentator too.
Link to this (Comment number 130)
Comment number 129.
Hawkeyethejock10th January 2013 - 8:41
Yobbish behaviour on the pitch equals yobbish behaviour in the crowd. That's why I don't go to watch cricket anymore, because I won't subject my children to the drunken, foul-mouthed antics of the "Barmy Army" types that have made this wonderful game a cringeworthy joke.
Link to this (Comment number 129)
Comments 5 of 133