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Ex-Australia cricketer Warner accepts decision to drink and drive was 'foolish'

May 7, 2026 Sports Source: BBC Sports

Ex-Australia cricketer Warner accepts  decision to drink and drive was 'foolish'

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David Warner will be "accepting responsibility" after he was charged last month, his lawyer says. Ex-Australia batter Warner admits decision to drink and drive 'foolish' Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking. Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking. Warner made 383 appearances in all formats for Australia between 2009 and 2024 Ex-Australia cricketer Warner accepts decision to drink and drive was 'foolish' A lawyer for former Australia batter David Warner has said his client will accept responsibility for a drink-driving charge, saying he knows his behaviour was "foolish" and "reckless". Warner, 39, was charged last month after returning a positive result following a random breath test in Maroubra, Sydney. He has yet to enter a plea. "I can indicate that David will be accepting responsibility for drink-driving," his lawyer Bobby Hill told reporters outside court on Thursday according to public broadcaster ABC. The cricketer, currently captain of Pakistan Super League side Karachi Kings, did not appear at the hearing and the case was adjourned until June. "He knows what he did was wrong," Hill said. "He accepts that was a reckless decision, a foolish decision to get in his car instead of taking an Uber." He said Warner had drunk three glasses of wine at a friend's apartment before getting in his car. "It's not a crime to have a glass of wine on the day of the lord's resurrection. In fact, some would consider that completely appropriate," Hill said. "His crime is, as I said, choosing a foolish plan A instead of a plan B." Warner, who retired from international cricket in 2024, is also captain of the Sydney Thunder. Cricket NSW chief executive Lee Germon said after he was charged in April that the allegations were "concerning" and that the body took them "very seriously. "At Cricket NSW, we are strong advocates for safe driving, not drink-driving," he said. A group of nine women and children has landed in Melbourne while another woman and her child arrived in Sydney. Kumanjayi Little Baby was found dead after going missing from an Aboriginal town camp in Alice Springs. Campaigners say Australia is giving away its gas 'for free' and should tax exports like Norway and Qatar.