“With Stevey he probably does it every single game or he does it regularly, and that’s the joy of social media I suppose, and people out there making a living from having to make comments as commentators. But I am absolutely 100% that there was zero in [what Smith did], but it did remind me a bit of that. I’m sure Smithy will be very conscious of it now…as I was after that. I probably never touched the top of the bail again.”During a Zoom call on which Smith’s manager Warren Craig was present, Langer termed some of the reaction to Smith as “ludicrous” and lauded how the batsman has carried himself since returning to the team.”I literally cannot believe some of the rubbish I read,” he said. “Anyone who suggests for one millisecond he was trying to do something untoward, they’re way out of line, absolutely out of line. That wicket was that flat and it was like concrete. You need 15-inch spikes to make an indent on the crease and he went nowhere near the crease.”So seriously, seriously, I thought that was absolutely ludicrous. In the last couple of years since he’s been back, he’s been exemplary on and off the field. He’s let his bat do the talking, he was abused like I’ve never seen anything through England and he just kept smiling and letting his bat do the talking. Give me a break.”Justin Langer on Tim Paine: ‘He’s been outstanding as the Australian captain in everything he does and he had a frustrating day’•Getty Images

Paine, who fronted another press conference on Tuesday where he apologised for how he went about things on the final day in Sydney, was also squarely defended by Langer.”Do I have faith in Tim Paine? You have no idea how much faith I’ve got in Tim Paine,” he said. “He didn’t have his best day, no doubt about that, but after three years he has hardly put a hair out of place, he’s been outstanding as the Australian captain in everything he does, and he had a frustrating day.”Paine’s public contrition had been the outcome of plentiful conversations between him, Langer and fellow assistant coaches Andrew McDonald and Matthew Mott following the end of the SCG Test, something the senior coach reckoned to be a healthy sign of how the team now functioned.”If behind closed doors our guys are stepping out of line we talk about it, we’ve talked a lot about what happened on that last day and we’ll continue to do that,” he said. “I hope over the last three years we’ve shown ourselves to be really good people and sportspeople on and off the cricket field. We don’t shy away – the captain got up publicly and put his leadership on the line yesterday and said ‘that’s not how we do it’ and that takes great courage to do that.”

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