{"id":96962,"date":"2023-12-04T10:25:15","date_gmt":"2023-12-04T10:25:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stopsmokingway.com\/?p=96962"},"modified":"2023-12-04T10:25:15","modified_gmt":"2023-12-04T10:25:15","slug":"mitchell-johnson-launches-savage-attack-on-david-warners-heros-send-off","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stopsmokingway.com\/sports-news\/mitchell-johnson-launches-savage-attack-on-david-warners-heros-send-off\/","title":{"rendered":"Mitchell Johnson launches savage attack on David Warner\u2019s \u2018hero\u2019s send-off\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"
David Warner is set to bow out of Test cricket at the end of Australia\u2019s series against Pakistan <\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Mitchell Johnson has launched on astonishing broadside at David Warner, questioning whether his former Australia team-mate deserves to sign off from Tests on his own terms.<\/p>\n
Warner has been Australia\u2019s linchpin opener for over a decade and key to their World Cup triumph, but he expressed his wish to retire from Tests at the end of their series against Pakistan in Sydney next month.<\/p>\n
He has been named in their squad for the first match in Perth, starting on 14 December, despite averaging 28.9 in his last 25 Tests, amassing just one hundred \u2013 albeit a double ton \u2013 in that time.<\/p>\n
But Warner was criticised for trying to organise his own farewell by former fast bowler Johnson, who thinks the 37-year-old is undeserving of one, pointing to his role in the 2018 ball-tampering saga.<\/p>\n
In his column for The West Australian<\/em>, Johnson, who represented Australia 256 times in all formats, wrote: \u201cIt\u2019s been five years and David Warner has still never really owned the ball-tampering scandal.<\/p>\n \u201cHe has a decent overall record and some say is one of our greatest opening bats. But his past three years in Test cricket have been ordinary, with a batting average closer to what a tailender would be happy with.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Mitchell Johnson (left) has hit out at former teammates David Warner <\/p>\n \u201cNow the way he is going out is underpinned by more of the same arrogance and disrespect to our country. As we prepare for David Warner\u2019s farewell series, can somebody please tell me why?<\/p>\n \u201cWhy a struggling Test opener gets to nominate his own retirement date. And why a player at the centre of one of the biggest scandals in Australian cricket history warrants a hero\u2019s send-off?\u201d<\/p>\n Johnson, who played 26 Tests alongside Warner including the 2013\/14 Ashes in which the former left-arm fast bowler terrorised England, also censured Australia\u2019s selectors.<\/p>\n George Bailey, Australia\u2019s chief selector and another former team-mate of Johnson, was accused of being too close to some players.<\/p>\n \u201cThe handling of Warner in recent years, who played with Bailey in all three forms, raises the question of whether Bailey was simply too quickly out of playing and into the job and too close to some of the players,\u201d Johnson added.<\/p>\n Responding to Johnson\u2019s critique, Bailey told a press conference: \u201cUltimately, we still think (Warner) is in our best 11 players to win the first Test.\u201d<\/p>\n Usman Khawaja, meanwhile, has also leapt to the defence of his opening partner, with the batter stressing that Warner and Steve Smith, captain at the time of the sandpaper scandal, served their punishments and should be regarded as \u201cheroes\u201d.<\/p>\n \u201cWarner and Smith are heroes in my mind,\u201d Khawaja said.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n David Warner (left) has been backed by opening partner Usman Khawaja<\/p>\n \u201cThey missed a year of cricket through dark times. No one\u2019s perfect. Mitchell Johnson\u2019s not perfect.<\/p>\n \u201cWhat they have done for the game, how they have grown the game, far outweighs anything else they have done. \u201cTo say Dave Warner or anyone else involved in sandpaper (gate) is not a hero… I strongly disagree because they have paid their dues. A year out of cricket is a long time.\u201d<\/p>\n