Showing posts with label Scandals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scandals. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

ICC issues please explain over Galle pitch

The International Cricket Council announced an inquiry overnight after considering the report from match referee Chris Broad of England who described the pitch as poor. ICC cricket manager David Richardson and chief match referee Ranjan Madugalle will now consider all the evidence, including video footage of the match and submissions from the hosts.

ICC issues please explain over Galle pitch

The match ended a day and rival captains Michael Clarke and Tillakaratne Dilshan slammed the dry wicket after play finished. Clarke, celebrating his first win as Australia captain, said he had never played on a tougher pitch.

“Day one felt like day five out there,” Clarke said. “I hate to see a Test match being determined by the toss. It was obviously prepared for their spin bowlers and that backfired. I guess I was just fortunate I won the toss.”Dilshan said he had not expected to play on such a dry surface.

“Usually, the wicket in Galle is good for both the seamers and the spinners, but I think it was too dry and made batting difficult,” he said. The second Test starts at the Pallekele International Stadium in Kandy on Thursday.

Friday, February 11, 2011

World Cup axe puzzles Tanvir

Tanvir, who was said to be suffering from a knee injury, was deemed unfit by the Pakistan Cricket Board's medical team and was replaced by fellow left-arm seamer Junaid Khan. "It is hugely disappointing to be dropped from a major event like the World Cup at the last moment," he said.

World Cup axe puzzles Tanvir

"I don't know why they dropped me and the selectors should tell me the reason because I was fit and getting better in bowling and fielding."The 26-year-old had played in five of the six matches in the recent series against New Zealand before being dropped. But the PCB has justified its decision saying that the medical panel had ruled that Tanvir was not 100 percent fit to play. "He still requires time to make a complete recovery from his knee problem for which he had an operation sometime back," the PCB said in a statement.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Waqar apologises for remarks

The coach questioned the board’s tactics and said the delay would only cause disharmony in the team with the tournament less than a month away. In response, the PCB sent a showcause notice to the former captain asking him to explain his comments that were against the board’s code of conduct.

Waqar apologises for remarks

Though the board has decided against giving any official statement to Younis’ reply, a board official said that the coach has apologised. “Younis has admitted his mistake and apologised for violating the code of conduct in his reply to the notice,” said the official adding that the coach has also given an assurance to avoid such statements in the future.

The PCB, under a new strict policy, is maintaining zero-tolerance and has quickly reacted to officials and players giving reckless statements. ICC website error creates confusion Even the International Cricket Council (ICC) seems confused after it displayed names of both Shahid Afridi and Misbahul Haq on its website as captain of the Pakistan team. While the front page of the website mentioned Afridi as captain, Misbah was named the skipper in the inside page. However, it was learnt that a technical error in uploading information caused the error and was rectified soon afterwards.

Monday, January 17, 2011

‘Trio to feature in World Cup if cleared’

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Ijaz Butt has said that the suspended trio – Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir – will be included in the World Cup squad if they are cleared from the spot-fixing allegations.

‘Trio to feature in World Cup if cleared’

The three Pakistan players are awaiting the verdict that was delayed until February 5 after a six-day hearing was held in Doha earlier this month before a three-man tribunal headed by Michael Beloff. The International Cricket Council (ICC) General Manager on Cricket David Richardson had earlier said that it will be up to the tournament committee to decide on the inclusion of any player after the deadline, which is January 19, for the final team announcement.

However, the PCB chief, who visited the under construction Benazir Bhutto International Cricket Stadium in Larkana yesterday, told reporters that the board has requested the ICC to allow the late inclusion of the trio if they are cleared. Meanwhile, Ijaz said that the 15-man squad for the global event will be announced on January 19.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Pakistan cricket 'spot-fixing' trio face tribunal

A make-or-break anti-corruption tribunal against Pakistan cricketers Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer opens in Doha Thursday, with the players facing lengthy bans if found guilty. The hearing will be held behind closed doors at the Qatar Financial Centre from 0630 GMT and is scheduled to run until January 11, although lawyers have indicated a verdict may come earlier.

The three face charges of spot-fixing during Pakistan's tour of England last year in a scandal that rocked the sport. It is alleged that they conspired in the bowling of deliberate no-balls -- claims they all deny. They were provisionally suspended by the International Cricket Council (ICC) in September, with the world governing body's code of conduct carrying a minimum five-year ban if corruption charges are proved.

The maximum punishment is life out of the game. The scandal came to light when Britain's News of the World claimed that seven Pakistani players, including Butt, Aamer and Asif, took money from bookie Mazhar Majeed to obey orders at specific stages in the Lord's Test in August.

Scotland Yard detectives raided the team hotel in London, reportedly confiscating a huge amount of money from Salman's room.

The three-man independent hearing is being led by code of conduct commissioner and leading lawyer Michael Beloff of England, aided by Justice Albie Sachs from South Africa and Kenyan Sharad Rao.

It is set to open with a statement from the prosecution followed by a response from representatives of the three players.

All three have serious legal heavyweights going in to bat for them with paceman Asif, 28, represented by Allan Cameron, brother of British Prime Minister David Cameron.

Former Test captain and opening batsman Salman, 26, is represented by British-based lawyer Yasin Patel, while 18-year-old fast bowler Aamer's legal team is headed by Shahid Karim from Pakistan.

British newspapers said Pakistan one-day captain Shahid Afridi and head coach Waqar Younis have been summoned as prosecution witnesses.

While the ICC has made clear it will not be commenting until a verdict is reached, chief executive Haroon Lorgat told the BBC recently he was confident of the case against the players.

"We need to send out a strong message and that is part of what we want to achieve," Lorgat said. "We've worked hard at collecting all the evidence that we would require to make the charges stand."

The Pakistan team are currently touring New Zealand, but speaking ahead of the hearing, Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ijaz Butt told reporters that corruption was a curse that must be stamped out.

"It has to be an all-out effort from all concerned to ensure that such wrongdoing does not occur in the future and we at the PCB are doing all we can to curtail all such practices," he said.

"The PCB and ICC have taken a lot of steps, future plans have been drafted to pursue a policy of zero tolerance to corruption."The scandal is seen as the worst in cricket since that of South Africa's Hansie Cronje.

A decade ago the former South Africa captain, who died in a mysterious plane crash in 2002, was revealed to have accepted money from bookmakers in a bid to influence the course of games as well as trying to corrupt his team-mates.

Friday, December 24, 2010

The Year in Review: Cricket

The Year in Review: CricketHow weirdly appropriate that judgment on Mohammad Aamer and his Pakistan team-mates Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif will be passed in Doha in January. The agony of the teenager was, after all, played out last summer at Lord's, the old centre of the cricket world, but with never a stronger sense that so much of his game, among others, had become so detached from its moorings. Thus his trial goes on beyond the known boundaries of sport, give or take the virtual World Cup of football planned for 2022 in the Qatar capital and the surrounding desert.

Not a lot can be expected, on past evidence, from this ill-starred chamber of sports justice in the wake of a year when there were so many instances of moral breakdown, from the stunning decisions of Fifa to award World Cups to a Russia plagued by racism and corruption and a Qatar which could only have been less appropriate had it relocated to the other side of Mars, to rugby union's Pontius Pilate washing of hands over the Bloodgate scandal of Harlequins.

So wretched a year it was indeed, it was almost impossible to fix on the most gut-wrenching example of self-immolation by the games we play.

This was almost so, but not quite. The fall of the wonderfully gifted youth from the Punjab represented such a haunting failure of care, and onslaught of cynicism and hypocrisy, that for some the memory of it will never be shaken.

There might, it is true, be some redemption down the years, if Aamer can somehow be restored to something of what he represented on a thrilling morning just 48 hours before he was transformed from an heroic young champion of cricket to one of the game's ultimate pariahs.

But what chance can we give for such a possibility? It is a small one when you consider the background to the accusation that he and Butt and Asif conspired to prove their willingness to meet "spot-fixing" demands by illegal bookmakers operating in an unfettered Indian betting market.

One of Butt's lawyers, Aftab Gul, was less than reassuring on the approach of the Doha hearing. He declared: "Corruption is rife in world cricket. I have so much evidence. I will tell you names which will make your hair stand on end. The worst corruption involves 'spot-fixing'. It is so much easier than any other form."

Spot-fixing does not shape the outcome of matches. It drains away the concept of honest endeavour, open-hearted competition. It is a series of small conspiracies, bowl a no-ball now, land the odds, and then get on with the job of playing the game. It is an accumulation of rottenness, which starts with, relatively speaking, a misdemeanour and then consumes anything of value.

At Lord's last summer it put you in mind of the perhaps apocryphal cry of the Chicago street urchin when the fabled baseball player Shoeless Joe Jackson went to answer charges that he had thrown the "Black Sox" World Series. "Say it ain't so, Joe," the boy was said to have implored. At Lord's there had to be the forlorn echo: "Say No, Mo."

The pain and despair at Lord's could only be exaggerated if you had followed even a little of Aamer's summer. You had heard of his reputation when you went along to Trent Bridge to see him against England, heard Wasim Akram's assessment that he was a smarter, more intuitive bowler than he had been at a similar age, but it was no adequate preparation for the beauty and the brilliance of the boy's game.

Gauche, poorly educated he may have been, but Aamer was stunning in his action and his instinct. You were compelled to watch his every delivery and as you did so, inevitably, you had the thrill that comes when you are sure, not out of any extraordinary knowledge or technical insight but the sheer invasion of reality that here is a perfectly formed talent.

You felt the same when you saw George Best and Sugar Ray Leonard and Roger Federer and Sachin Tendulkar for the first time.

At Lord's, even as the News of the World investigators were applying the finishing touches to their damning dossier, the promise of Aamer was delivered in an improbable, unforgettable rush. He was simply unplayable as one after another English batsman failed to cope with beautiful flight and movement.

Then we heard how he had been subverted by a betting ring, apparently, whose principal fixer felt empowered to call him in his hotel room with the greeting: "Hey, fucker."

No one was in a position to say that, for all his lack of schooling and example, he was without blame, but what was so apparent was that within a society shot through with corruption and a cricket association long assailed by charges that its teams had been penetrated and utterly compromised by match-fixers was a total lack of protection.

Then there was the picture that compounded the misery and gave a fine edge to the statement of the former Ashes-winning fast bowler Bob Willis that he had been moved near to tears by the news that the career of such a perfect young talent might be in ruins. It was of Giles Clarke, the chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, handing to Aamer the prize for being Pakistan's player of the series. Clarke wore an expression of such contempt that the wonder was that he had not borrowed a face mask and some plastic gloves for the pitilessly empty ceremony.

It was impossible not to remember the chairman's rather different mood when embracing Allen Stanford, the American patron of English cricket now awaiting Federal trial for massive fraud, when his helicopter landed at Lord's bearing millions of dollars in a large container. That, though, was a day of the most vulgar celebration of quick money from wherever it came. The new one at Lord's was to mark some unremitting moral judgment on a boy raised in the grinding poverty of a poor Punjabi village.

Denouement in Doha is unlikely to remove any of the rawness of the emotions provoked by the sight of Clarke's disdain for a once gilded youth who could only stare at the ground slipping beneath him. But then, who knows, someone might just have the nerve to draw a line in the sand. It may be too late to say, "No, Mo" but not, out of conscience, to hold out, finally, a helping hand.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

ICC's suspension is injustice: Amir

ICC's suspension is injustice: AmirForced to stay out of cricket for quite some time now because of spot-fixing allegations, tainted Pakistan pacer Muhammad Amir has described the ICC's suspension as a grave "injustice". "Suspending us without showing any worthwhile evidence and then retaining that suspension is injustice," Amir told the Duniya news channel.

Amir, alongwith, former Test captain Salman Butt and pace colleague Muhammad Asif was provisionally suspended by the ICC on September 2 after the News of the World tabloid carried a report that alleged bookie Mazhar Majeed had bribed them to spot-fix in the fourth Test against England at Lord's. The trio then appealed with the ICC against their suspensions with Asif later withdrawing his appeal. Butt and Aamir appeared before a one-man appellate tribunal in Dubai last month which dismissed their appeals. Amir said that the experience of appearing before the appellate tribunal had been a hugely disappointing one.

"No evidence was shown to us. Our lawyers gave strong arguments in favour of lifting the suspensions, but they (ICC) ignored it," he said. Amir claimed that under ICC's anti-corruption regulations if the game's governing body fails to produce any evidence against the trio by next month then their suspensions would be removed automatically.

The 19-year-old left-arm pacer said it was frustrating wait for the trio as it had been more than two months since the ICC had enforced the suspension on them but till now failed to set a date for the full hearing.

Interestingly, sources in the Pakistan Cricket Board said today that the ICC had finally constituted a three-member tribunal that would hold the full hearing into the allegations against the players between January 3 to 11 next year. Amir also claimed that the video footage of the players with Majeed proved nothing and could not be considered as an evidence.

He also claimed that Scotland Yard in its initial two reports given to the Crown Prosecutor's Office in London had not been able to produce any substantial evidence and had now submitted a third file.vAmir also felt that the PCB after supporting the players initially had gone on the backfoot. He expressed confidence that the trio would be cleared before the 2011 World Cup in the the sub-continent.

"Missing the World Cup would be a disaster for someone like me. But I know I am innocent and my conscience is clear and my lawyers are also working hard on my case. "The ICC has to decide before the World Cup on our case. That is why I feel I will be able to play in the tournament," Amir said. The promising pacer said that even though he did not play a single competitive game since the suspension, he was carrying out his individual training on daily basis. "I want to be ready when the time comes for my comeback," Amir said.

"I have had a lot of good things to see in my cricketing career. Now I am going through this bad phase but one has to cope with both situations and I am doing that. I am just grateful that my family and friends are supporting me a lot," he added.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Salman Butt and Mohammad Amir accuse ICC of 'conspiracy against Pakistan'

Butt and Amir are suspended indefinitely while the ICC mounts its investigation into alleged spot-fixing during the fourth Test against England at Lord’s unearthed by the News of the World. Michael Beloff QC chaired a disciplinary hearing in Dubai at the weekend which threw out their appeals against the suspension. Pace bowler Mohammad Asif, their fellow Pakistan Test player, had already withdrawn his appeal.

Salman Butt and Mohammad Amir accuse ICC of 'conspiracy against Pakistan'

Butt returned to Pakistan on Monday and launched a series of attacks on the ICC during a tour of Pakistani television channels. “They listened to us but it felt as if their decision had already been made from before,” Butt said. “It was not based on a single piece of evidence. After a 12-hour hearing the only so-called evidence they had was the same News Of The World article and the same video everyone has seen.

The three have been banned from using the training facilities at the Pakistan Cricket Board academy as the administrators react to stinging private criticism from the ICC over its handling of anti-corruption measures.

The PCB are fighting for their own future, with strong voices within the game calling on the ICC to take over the running of the board, making it politically expedient to put distance between the administrators and the accused players.

“It [the PCB distancing itself] wasn’t expected,” Butt said. “Nobody from the PCB has even called us so I don’t know what is going on there. But I think now is the time for even the government to get involved as well as the PCB because it isn’t just about three players. This is Pakistan being cornered.”

Amir, the youngest of the accused, added: “Before leaving for Dubai we felt the case will be in our favour, but when he [Beloff] gave the decision it looked as if he had written the decision before. We went for the truth but this could be a conspiracy against Pakistan, to tarnish Pakistan’s reputation.”

The duo had hoped the lifting of their suspensions would allow them to take part in the one-day and Test series against South Africa currently taking place in Abu Dhabi, and then the World Cup next year in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Pakistan 'SPOT-FIXING' Timeline

News breaks of a cricket corruption story in the following day's News of the World. The newspaper allegations centre on the timing of no-balls delivered during the fourth Test between England and Pakistan, which at this stage is still ongoing.

August 29: A 35-year-old man is arrested in connection with police inquiries into allegations of 'spot-fixing' to defraud illegal bookmakers, as reported by the News of the World. Police later confirm that cricket agent Mazhar Majeed has been bailed without charge over the allegations. Pakistan team management confirm that captain Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer have had their mobile phones confiscated by police.

August 30: A three-man delegation from Pakistan's Federal Investigations Agency is sent to London to probe the claims of spot-fixing.

The International Cricket Council promise to take "swift and decisive action"

if the allegations made against the Pakistan trio are proved.

September 1: Butt, Asif and Aamer travel to London from the team hotel in Taunton for a meeting with the Pakistan High Commission the next day, also attended by Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ijaz Butt.

September 2: Pakistan team manager Yawar Saeed confirms the trio will miss the Twenty20 and one-day international sections of their ongoing series against England. Pakistan High Commissioner Wajid Shamsul Hasan announces that the players all insist they are innocent of any wrongdoing.

The ICC charge the trio under their anti-corruption code and suspend them until the case is concluded.

September 3: ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat confirms that Butt, Asif and Aamer were being questioned by police in London. They are later released without charge.

September 4: The News of the World issues news of follow-up allegations to appear in the following day's paper, with Test opener Yasir Hameed reportedly admitting some of his team-mates were involved in fixing "in almost every match". Hameed later claimed he was only repeating allegations he had read in the newspapers.

September 6: Pakistan's limited-overs captain Shahid Afridi welcomes the decision of the Pakistani government to sanction the assistance of the Federal Board of Revenue to scrutinise the financial assets of the country's professional cricketers.

September 9: PCB chairman Ijaz Butt confirms paceman Wahab Riaz will be questioned by police on September 14 as part of the 'spot-fixing' probe.

September 10: Lawyers acting for Salman Butt, Asif and Aamer confirm the trio will leave England for Pakistan immediately.

September 14: Butt, Asif and Aamer write to the ICC indicating their intention to defend themselves in respect of the charges brought against them by the sport's world governing body.

Wahab Riaz interviewed under caution by the police.

September 17: Scotland Yard confirmed a file of evidence on claims that Pakistan cricketers accepted cash bribes to fix matches had been passed to prosecutors.

September 18: The ICC confirm they are investigating a "certain scoring pattern" which occurred during the third one-day international between England and Pakistan at the Oval.

September 19: PCB chairman Butt alleges that some England players claimed "enormous amounts of money" to fix the result of the match at the Oval on September 17.

September 20: England captain Andrew Strauss expresses his "surprise, dismay and outrage" at Butt's remarks and admits he and his team-mates had "strong misgivings" about finishing off the one-day series. The ECB said in a statement that Butt should relay any information he has to the ICC's anti-corruption unit and described his comments as "wholly irresponsible and without foundation".

September 29: Butt apologises for his remarks regarding the England team after the threat of legal action by the ECB.October 6: ICC confirm the appeals of Salman Butt, Aamer and Asif against their provisional suspensions will be heard in Doha on October 30 and 31.

October 22: Asif withdraws appeal against his provisional suspension.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Shahid Afridi issues apology on behalf of Pakistan's scandal-hit trio

Pakistan's one-day captain, Shahid Afridi, has issued a remarkable public apology on behalf of the three players at the centre of cricket's betting scandal. "I think it is very bad news," he said. "On behalf of these players – I know they are not in this series – but on behalf of these boys I want to say sorry to all cricket lovers and all the cricketing nations."

Shahid Afridi issues apology on behalf of Pakistan's scandal-hit trio

Afridi was at pains to distance himself from those implicated in the betting scandal – the Test captain, Salman Butt, and the fast bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif – as he arrived at nets ahead of Pakistan's Twenty20 game against England in Cardiff today.

He made no attempt to proclaim that they were innocent until proven guilty and he also stressed that he had no anger about the investigation into the players. "No," was his emphatic response.

Afridi also revealed that the Pakistan agent involved in the affair has travelled regularly with the team. "This guy has been travelling with the guys in the West Indies and in Australia," he said. "I saw him on the tours. I didn't know anything about this."

The players are undergoing an investigation by the Metropolitan police and the International Cricket Council have charged them under cricket's code of conduct.

Afridi guaranteed that the two Twenty20s and five ODIs would go ahead whatever further revelations might appear in newspapers.

"I told the boys don't read the newspapers tomorrow, just focus on cricket. I know the Pakistan people are very upset. We all love cricket. As I team all we can do is to play good, aggressive cricket and maybe when we go back home maybe the things will settle down.

"It is a big challenge for me as a captain but I think we are all ready and focused. Myself and the coach have already told the boys: 'Don't talk about this issue, we are here to play cricket.'"

 

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