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Candice Warner: 'It's my fault' for husband's ball-tamper crisis

AFP  |  Sydney 

Disgraced former vice-captain David Warner's wife said today she blamed herself for his part in the ball-tampering scandal, adding that the taunts they faced in took a huge toll.

Opening batsman Warner was banned for one year from domestic and international over the plot to change the condition of the ball on the third day of the third Test against eight days ago.

In a tearful press conference in yesterday, the 31-year-old spoke of his fear that he would never get to represent again as his wife watched on.

"I feel like it's all my fault and it's killing me -- it's absolutely killing me," Warner told Sydney's

The Test series was already fractious before the ball-tampering affair, with a row between and during the first Test which the Australian said was sparked when the South African insulted his wife.

Two senior officials were also photographed with three spectators wearing All face masks during the second Test in reference to a reported intimate encounter Warner had with him in 2007 before she met Warner.

Warner said she was not making excuses for her husband's behaviour over the scandal but added that he was "protecting me as much as he could and protecting the girls (their children)".

"But Dave would come home from the game and see me in tears in the bedroom, and the girls just looking at their mum, it's been heartbreaking," she said.

"When we were in and Port Elizabeth, Dave would come home and, yes, I always put on a strong front and I turn out to the games.

"But seeing them wearing the masks, to have people staring and pointing and laughing at me, to have the signs, to have, you know, the songs made up about me, I would have to sit there and cop that."

Warner also called for sympathy and patience from Australian fans, saying the batsman was struggling to cope with the fallout.

Warner evaded questions during the press conference about whether the ball-tampering plan was his idea, whether it was the first time, who else was aware of it and whether he had been made a scapegoat.

He has appeared isolated after being charged by with developing the plot and telling -- who was suspended for nine months -- to carry it out.

"I'm sure there were things he wanted to say but he just couldn't get it out. He is hurting. He is seriously, seriously struggling and he's not in a great headspace," she said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 01 2018. 09:40 IST
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