Warner
Warner can return to leadership role as Cricket Australia changes code of conduct
Australian opener, David Warner, who faced a lifetime ban from a leadership role due to his involvement in a ball tampering incident years ago, may be able to overturn it as Cricket Australia voted on Monday to alter its code of conduct.
In a statement, Cricket Australia said players or officials subject to lifetime bans would now be able to have those sanctions reviewed if they demonstrated remorse and evidence of good behaviour.
Warner was banned from ever holding a leadership position for his role in the 2018 ball-tampering scandal in South Africa.
The new systems announced Monday might allow him to almost immediately apply to a panel of three code of conduct commissioners to review his ban.
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In an amendment, the code of conduct now "acknowledges that players and player support personnel are capable of genuine reform or rehabilitation and is intended to provide the player or player support personnel with an opportunity to resume their previously held positions or responsibilities in specific circumstances."
The change might allow Warner to lead Australia if, as expected, current Twenty20 captain Aaron Finch steps down in the near future. The Sydney Thunder also appear to be considering Warner for a leadership role when he plays for the side in the Big Bash League in January.
"Under the changes, players and support staff can now apply to have long-term sanctions modified," Cricket Australia said in a statement. "Any applications will be considered by a three-person review panel, comprising independent code of conduct commissioners which must be satisfied that exceptional circumstances exist to justify modifying a sanction."
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"These circumstances and considerations will include whether the subject of the sanction has demonstrated genuine remorse; the subject’s conduct and behaviour since the imposition of the sanction; whether rehabilitation programs have been completed undertaken (if applicable) and the length of time that has passed since the sanction was imposed and whether sufficient time has passed to allow for reform or rehabilitation."
Warner criticised the length of time Cricket Australia had taken to institute an appeal process, saying a life ban had been "a bit harsh." He said he would take up the opportunity to put his case.
"It's good to get in a position where it gives me an opportunity to ring up the integrity unit to have a word to them and put forward my case," Warner said. "It's been drawn out and it's traumatic for me and my family and everyone else who was involved in it. We don't need to relive what happened."
2 years ago
David Bowie’s extensive music catalog is sold to Warner
The extensive music catalog of David Bowie, stretching from the late 1960s to just before his death in 2016, has been sold to Warner Chappell Music.
More than 400 songs, among them “Space Oddity,” “Ziggy Stardust,” “Fame,” “Rebel Rebel” and “Let’s Dance” on 26 Bowie studio albums released during his lifetime, a posthumous studio album release, Toy, two studio albums from Tin Machine, as well as tracks released as singles from soundtracks and other projects, are included.
Financial details of the sale were not released. Warner Chapell is the music publishing wing of Warner Music Group Corp.
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David Bowie, born David Jones in London in 1947, died in January 2016 after battling cancer for 18 months. As a performer, Bowie had unpredictable range of styles, melding European jadedness with American rhythms and his ever-changing personas and wardrobes. The gaunt and erudite Bowie brought an open theatricality and androgyny to popular music that changed the very meaning of being a rock star. He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1996.
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Last year Warner Music Group reached a deal with the Bowie estate that gave Warner Music licensed worldwide rights to Bowie’s recorded music catalog from 1968.
2 years ago