Ahmed Q: Cricket corruption in the sub-continent (14 Feb 95)
Bogus journalists and shady agents: There have long been rumours of cricket corruption in India and Pakistan
14-Feb-1995
Bogus journalists and shady agents: There have long been rumours
of cricket corruption in India and Pakistan. Qamar Ahmed examines
the evidence
Qamar Ahmed
Gambling has long cast its shadow over cricket on the subcontinent, where millions of dollars ride on international
matches.
The main centre of operations is the Stock Exchange in Bombay. The whole system works by word of mouth, because, horseracing apart, gambling is illegal in India and is completely
outlawed in the Islamic state of Pakistan.
The system works through the agents of the bookmakers. With
some masquerading as journalists, the agents are present in nearly every Test series, no matter where it is played or who is
playing.
During a Test match or a one-day international, the press box
sometimes receives dozens of calls a day from people in India and
Pakistan inquiring about weather conditions, the state of play
and the total number of runs that will be scored by a team in an
innings.
Only last year in New Zealand, I received a call from Bombay
while covering a match at Eden Park in Auckland. The caller asked
me to convey a message to one of the Indian cricketers: "Please
ignore whatever has been decided this morning." I asked the caller who he was, and he said he was a bookmaker.
One of India`s leading bookmakers hanged himself immediately
after South Africa`s visit to India in 1992, while others have
been imprisoned and had their offices seized.
It was therefore no surprise that when Pakistan suffered successive defeats by huge margins in Tests against South Africa and
Zimbabwe recently, tongues started to wag.
Countrywide condemnation of the team was swiftly followed by
allegations in the Pakistan press and from a former Test player
that the squad was throwing matches for huge sums of money. The
charges have been denied by both the manager of the team, Intikhab Alam, and the captain, Salim Malik.
It is not the first time such charges have been made. Last
September, when Pakistan beat Sri Lanka 2-0 in Tests and 4-1 in
the one-day series in Sri Lanka, and later started to lose
matches in a one-day tournament, there were similar allegations,
and the Federal Intelligency Agency in Pakistan was advised by
the Sports Board to look into the matter. Nothing has yet
come out of the investigation. So although the claims coming from
Australia are a shock, they are not a big surprise.
No concrete evidence has been so far produced of players being
bribed and no one has been charged. Intikhab said that the
allegations against his team are totally baseless. "My team lost
the Test matches against South Africa and Zimbabwe because they
played poorly, and it has nothing to do with the players or the
team accepting any kind of bribe or money from any bookmaker," he
said.
---------------- Qamar Ahmed is an experienced observer of
cricket on the subcontinent who has reported on more than 200
Tests around the world.
Source : The Independent, 14 Feb 95