Ex-Test cricketer fails to quash coke supply conviction

Stuart MacGill has failed to overturn a conviction for drug supply. Photo: AAP
Former spin bowler Stuart MacGill has failed to overturn a conviction for drug supply over a cocaine deal that led to his kidnapping.
The former leg-spinner was a regular user of cocaine when he introduced his dealer to another man in April 2021.
MacGill, 55, knew the quantity of cocaine exchanged was valued at $330,000 but did not know the exact weight after being told the dealer wanted “a brick”.
In May 2025, he was convicted of taking part in the supply of 250 grams or less of cocaine and sentenced to a 22-month intensive corrections order and 495 hours of community service.
But the former cricketing great appealed both the conviction and sentence in the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal. It was rejected on Wednesday.
“The appeal is dismissed,” Justice Anthony Payne told the court, more than a year after the sentence was handed down.
MacGill had argued the judge erred in determining the exact quantity of drugs he thought was being exchanged during the deal.
He did not receive any of the $330,000 from the exchange but had $1000 of drug debts wiped by his dealer.
The deal led to MacGill being later assaulted in a dilapidated rural shed after his dealer stole two bricks of cocaine in a subsequent drug ripoff.
Once viewed as one of the world’s top spin bowlers, MacGill is on JobSeeker while working as a casual cricket coach.
He retired from cricket in 2008 after a career throttled by the sport’s greatest legspinner, Shane Warne, who was two years his senior.
MacGill played 44 Tests, claiming 208 wickets at an average of 29.02.
-AAP
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