Faf du Plessis will find out by Sunday if he will face a charge for breaching the ICC Code of Conduct after South Africas stand-in captain was shown on camera shining the ball with what appeared to be a sweet in his mouth. ICC CEO David Richardson is expected to take a call over the incident, which took place during the recent Hobart Test.The footage emerged on Wednesday, the day after the conclusion of the match, which South Africa won by an innings and 80 runs to take the series. It was not reported by match officials within the stipulated 18 hours after the game. Instead, the ICC was alerted of the incident through media queries and is now reviewing it of its own volition. It has until Sunday, a stipulated five days after it began reviewing the footage, to make its decision.The ICC has been alerted to the footage and is currently reviewing the incident from the perspective of it being a possible breach of the ICC Code of Conduct, an ICC spokesperson told ESPNcricinfo.Although Cricket South Africa has not made an official comment on the matter, it is understood the board is confident du Plessis was acting within the laws of the game. Cricket Australia has also not commented, neither has it registered an official complaint.This is not the first time du Plessis has come under scrutiny. In 2013, five penalty runs were awarded to Pakistan, the ball changed and du Plessis fined 50% of his match fee for rubbing the ball close to the zipper of his trouser pocket during a Test in Dubai. Du Plessis pleaded guilty to the charge and match referee David Boon said he was satisfied that du Plessis actions were not part of a deliberate and/or prolonged attempt to unfairly manipulate the condition of the ball.It is also not the first time South Africa have faced allegations of tampering with the ball, by either opposition or officials. In March 2014, David Warner accused AB de Villiers of scuffing up the ball with his gloves, for which Warner was fined 15% of his match fee. After the Perth Test, Josh Hazlewood said he saw South Africa throwing the ball onto the pitch in order to try and accelerate the deterioration of one side in order to generate reverse-swing. Ahead of the Hobart Test, du Plessis maintained the ball had reversed the same for both teams and said the issue had been blown out of proportion. Neither incident was taken up further.Previously, in July 2014, Vernon Philander was fined 75% of his match fee after footage of him digging into the ball with his nail was made available to Jeff Crowe, the match referee in Sri Lanka. Philander accepted his penalty without contest.South Africa were originally scheduled to play a two-day pink-ball practice match over the weekend in Melbourne. Instead, that game has been altered to a one-day match on Saturday, giving them extra time off after their series win and ahead of the final Test, which starts in Adelaide from November 24. Minnesota Vikings Throwback Jerseys . Then the Pacers gave Oladipo and his Orlando teammates the cold shoulder. Paul Georges buzzer-beating 3-pointer at the end of the third quarter spurred a 21-4 run, finally sending Indiana past the Magic 97-87 in a tougher-than-expected opening night matchup. Cheap Vikings Jerseys China . All of the scoring came in the final 20:04. Lucic scored on a power play at 15:46 of the third period, when he tipped a shot over Stars goalie Kari Lehtonen for a 3-1 lead. http://www.fansvikingsteamstore.com/ . "I dont know that were close," said general manager Alex Anthopoulos. "I just think, right now, the acquisition cost just doesnt work for us right now. I dont know if I can quantify how far off or things like that that they might be but I would say we continue to have dialogue. Vikings Jerseys For Sale Cheap . He said Tuesday thats a big reason why he is now the new coach of the Tennessee Titans. Whisenhunt said he hit it off quickly with Ruston Webster when interviewing for the job Friday night. Wholesale Vikings Jerseys . In what the team had called a retirement, Ryan said Thursday that he is resigning as chief executive of the Rangers in a move effective at the end of this month. Lawyers acting for former Great Britain track rider Jess Varnish have asked British Cycling to release all the documents related to her removal from the team and the investigation into her bullying complaint against ex-technical director Shane Sutton.In a letter to the governing body, which Press Association Sport has seen, Varnishs lawyers request her performance data, medical records and text messages sent by senior coaches in the GB Olympic set-up about her.The letter cites section seven of the Data Protection Act 1998 and calls on British Cycling, as a data controller, to release the processed personal data of which she is subject.The 26-year-olds hopes of qualifying for the Rio Olympics in the team sprint were ended at the Track World Championships in London in March, partly because of selection issues earlier in the qualification period.Varnish criticised the GB coaches after this setback but her anger would escalate a month later when she was dropped from the programme, with British Cycling saying her performances had been in decline for three years.She then claimed that Sutton told her to go and have a baby, among other sexist remarks, which led to further allegations of bullying and derogatory language made by other riders against the teams most senior coach..ddddddddddddSutton promptly resigned and two investigations were launched into the affair: one by British Cycling director Alex Russell and the other, a wider look at the squads culture, by British Rowing chair Annamarie Phelps on behalf of the government funding agency UK Sport.The result of Russells report was announced in October and it said there was evidence that Sutton used inappropriate and discriminatory language but, earlier this month, it was revealed that only one of nine charges was upheld against the Australian. This related to his use of the word bitches.Neither Sutton nor Varnish are satisfied with this result and now Varnish has started legal proceedings to obtain what British Cycling has claimed are the objective criteria for releasing her, as well as the evidence Russell based her findings on.Signed by the firms senior partner Irwin Mitchell, the data subject access request concludes by saying a £10 cheque -- the maximum prescribed fee for finding and collating the data -- has been attached.British Cycling has confirmed to Press Association Sport that it has received the letter but does not wish to comment at this stage. ' ' '