Sachin Tendulkar called the sanctions handed out by Cricket Australia in the ball-tampering scandal “the right decision” even as the cricketing community is divided over the severity of the bans imposed on the three players.

Cricket Australia on Wednesday banned Steve Smith and David Warner for one-year while Cameron Bancroft was given a nine-month ban after the board completed its investigation into the ball-tampering scandal.

“It’s a game that I believe should be played in the purest form,” Tendulkar said on Twitter. “Whatever has happened is unfortunate but the right decision has been taken to uphold the integrity of the game. Winning is important but the way you win is more important.”

Aussie legend Shane Warne, however, felt that the punishment handed out to Smith and his two teammates after their involvement in ball tampering was a bit too harsh.

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“I am still trying to wrestle with what I think the punishment should be. They have to be harsh, but if they are rubbed out for a year, the punishment does not fit the crime,” Warne wrote on his Facebook page.

Warne said that the players’ embarrassing act called for a hefty fine but not a 12-month ban.

“Let’s take the emotion out of it. We are all feeling angry and embarrassed. But you need a level head and you shouldn’t destroy someone unless they deserve to be destroyed. Their actions were indefendable, and they need to be severely punished. But I don’t think a one-year ban is the answer.

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“My punishment would have been to miss the fourth Test match, a huge fine, and be sacked as captain and vice-captain. But they should still be allowed to play,” he felt.

“The punishment is way too harsh but the crime committed on the field cannot be condoned,” said the legendary leg-spinner.

“To hear that the Australian cricket team had been involved in pre-mediated cheating is something that is embarrassing. There is no way you can condone it. We are all so hurt and angry and maybe we weren’t so sure how to react. We’d just never seen it before.

“But the jump to hysteria is something that has elevated the offence beyond what they actually did, and maybe we’re at a point where the punishment just might not fit the crime,” Warne added.