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"Dhoni has not been penalised on this occasion but he has been advised that if he uses the gloves again before they have been modified, inspected and cleared, he could be charged for a breach of Clause C1 of the Code of Conduct," match referee Jeff Crowe said in a statement.
Dhoni, on his part, has agreed not to use the gloves after being found to be in breach of the "Laws of Cricket". "After I raised my concern in the India dressing room, Dhoni immediately changed his gloves on the advice of the India team management which was a reasonable thing to do," Crowe said.
The two on-field umpires, Daryl Harper and Tony Hill, third umpire Bruce Oxenford and Crowe gave the ruling after inspecting Dhoni's gloves following Australia's 18-run victory in a high-scoring thriller in the 10th match of the ongoing tri-series.
The match officials found Dhoni's gloves had extra webbing between the thumb and the forefinger which was a violation of Law 40.2, which relates to gloves. "The wicketkeeper's gloves shall have no webbing between the fingers except joining index finger and thumb, where webbing may be inserted as a means of support," the ICC said.



It is a harsh word. One needs to hold on to their language. That is what happenening in India and Australian match
indians are cheats.if highly respected can cheat than we can imagine how worst the others
hey red eye, did your eye turned red after Indian poked it ... you pakis will never rise beyond this... i dont have time for listing the thing paki's have done from umpiring to bowling actions.. hahaha....
oz are the cheats, the gloves are supplied by an oz supplier.. lol
How about Ghilcrist using Squash ball while batting? Is this legal?
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