'Didn't tell anyone': Umpire spills on more Aussie ball-tampering secrets
Former Test umpire Ian Gould admits to being shocked by the fallout that followed the sandpaper incident in South Africa.
Englishman Gould, who retired after last year's Cricket World Cup, was the TV umpire when Cameron Bancroft was caught ball tampering in the third Test in Cape Town.
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He was sent the initial footage of Bancroft doctoring the ball which the West Australian initially denied when approached by on-field umpires Nigel Llong and Richard Illingworth.
"I was sitting there minding my own business when the TV director said 'I've got some pictures for you'," Gould told BBC Radio's Tuffers and Vaughan show.
"I then told the lads in the middle what I had been shown and asked them to ask Bancroft what he had in his pocket.
"He went in to his pocket and brought out a black sunglasses cloth.
"Within two balls the director is back on and saying 'we've got a lot more footage.
"Those were the fateful pictures of the yellow sandpaper and showed him putting it down his trousers.
"At the end of it all it was there in front of you."
Gould admitted to being taken aback by the enormity of the situation in the days that followed especially the emotional press conferences conducted by skipper Smith and Bancroft in Australia.
"Cameron Bancroft is a lovely, lovely lad," he said.
"At the end of the day's play he put his tracksuit on, didn't tell anyone where he was going and came into our room and apologised to us for lying.
"You could see he was heartbroken but he came in for five minutes, apologised and got up and just walked away. It took a lot to do that.
"Watching Steve and Cameron on the TV in Australia, well that was hard as they are good people, decent people."
Smith and Warner were handed 12-month bans and Bancroft nine months by Cricket Australia.
Veteran official expected players to be hit with one-game bans
Gould expected the trio to be hit with a one-match ban under ICC regulations as it was their first offence.
"Under the rulebook they would have got a one-game ban, but I just think the Australian public had simply had enough of the team," he said.
The affable Gould, known as 'Gunner' in reference to his days as a youth team player for Arsenal, was one of the most popular umpires during his 13 years on the international circuit.
But he admits the abrasive on-field behaviour of the Australian team between 2014 and 2018 often raised the eyebrows of umpires.
"They used to railroad teams a little bit and it got out of hand," he said.
"You would stand back and think 'wow'.
"The first real incident during that time was Australia against India in Adelaide shortly after poor Phillip Hughes had passed away.
"It was the most surreal game of cricket for two days that I have ever known.
"But for the next three days it was like a war out there."
Umpire believes scandal changed cricket for the better
VetGould has recounted his memories from the Australian ball-tampering scandal, saying the Aussies’ behaviour had been out of control for years.
The Englishman was acting as third umpire as Australia battled South Africa in Cape Town in 2018, in a Test that would culminate into the infamous sandpaper-gate scandal.
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In his new autobiography, Gunner - My Life in Cricket, the 62-year-old Gould said he was shocked at how significant the fallout was from the incident.
“Then the true scandal really broke, when more TV pictures showed Bancroft concealing sandpaper, and shame descended not only on Australia's cricket team, but the nation,” Gould writes.
“I didn't realise what the repercussions would be.
“But when it came into my earpiece I didn't think the prime minister of Australia was going to come tumbling down on these three guys.
“All I thought was – Jesus, how do I put this out to the guys on the field without making it an overreaction.”
Gould says that infamous day in March 2018 had actually been building for a number of years as Australia’s behaviour on the field grew increasingly poor.
However he believes it’s sparked change for the better.
“If you look back on it now, Australia were out of control probably two years, maybe three years, before that, but not in this sense,” he writes.
“Maybe – behavioural, chatty, being pretty average people.
“Obviously, what's come from it is for the betterment of Australian cricket – and cricket generally.”
with Yahoo Sport staff