'I have done the wrong thing and accept the penalty': Australia ban James Pattinson from Pakistan Test

Fast bowler suspended for Brisbane Test after admitting Cricket Australia charge of 'personal abuse of an opponent

James Pattinson has been suspended by Cricket Australia for personal abuse of an opposition player. Reuters
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Australia fast bowler James Pattinson will miss this week's first Test against Pakistan after Cricket Australia banned him for personal abuse of an opponent while playing for Victoria in a Sheffield Shield match.

Pattinson was vying with Mitchell Starc for the third pace-bowling spot in the Australia side for the opening match in the two-Test series, which starts in Brisbane on Thursday.

It is not the first time Pattinson has fallen foul of Cricket Australia's Code of Conduct. The 29-year-old had already been found guilty of two breaches over the past year and was handed the ban when he admitted abusing a Queensland player during the domestic match last week.

Pattinson issued a statement accepting Cricket Australia's punishment, acknowledging he "made a mistake in the heat of the moment" and that he had apologised to the player.

"Straight away I realised I was in the wrong, and I apologised immediately, both to the opponent and to the umpires," he said.

"I have done the wrong thing and accept the penalty. I'm gutted to miss a Test match, but the standards are there for a reason and the fault is mine."

Cricket Australia said Pattinson would not be replaced in the squad for the two Tests against Pakistan, which means Starc is likely to play alongside Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood in Australia's pace attack for the match at the Gabba.

Australia have cracked down on bad behaviour by their players since the ball-tampering scandal during a Test against South Africa in early 2018 led to one-year bans for then captain Steve Smith and vice-captain David Warner.

Australia captain Tim Paine told ABC Radio Pattinson "knows that he's let himself down, he's let the group down.

"We actually had a chat last night about how we hold ourselves to really high standards now with our behaviour.

"That's not just when we're playing [international] cricket, we've got to go back to domestic cricket and lead the way on that front as well.

"We're disappointed in that but James has owned up, knows he's made a mistake and apologised for it, and he'll come back bigger and better."