Australia select Miller amid legal distraction (1 October 1998)
The whiff of past corruption threatens to obscure the start in Rawalpindi today of the three-Test series between Pakistan and Australia
01-Oct-1998
1 October 1998
Australia select Miller amid legal distraction
By Peter Deeley in Rawalpindi
The whiff of past corruption threatens to obscure the start in
Rawalpindi today of the three-Test series between Pakistan and
Australia.
On the eve of the first game a letter from the Lahore High Court was
last night handed to Australia's team manager Steve Bernard,
requesting the attendance of various players at the judicial hearing
into allegations of match fixing and betting against some members of
the Pakistan side.
Bernard wryly dismissed the timing of the missive from Mr Justice
Malik Muhammad Qayyum as "a massive coincidence". It arrived at an
unwelcome moment, just as the Australian tour selectors were sitting
down to choose their team.
The selectors came up with two major surprises, with Tasmania's Colin
Miller making his Test debut, at 34, bowling a mixture of fast-medium
and off-spin, and Darren Lehmann replacing Ricky Ponting.
Mark Taylor, as captain, and Mark Waugh, as one who claimed he was
offered bribery money, were both named in the judge's letter. So too
was Shane Warne - at home recovering from his shoulder operation -
and Tim May, now retired, having asserted he would never visit
Pakistan again.
Waugh said that he was reluctant to go to court to give evidence in
Lahore at this time. He said: "I am trying to block it all out and
concentrate on the cricket."
Waugh added: "It is disappointing that such controversies are
happening in cricket around the world.
"There are obviously some problems in the game in Pakistan, which
have to be sorted out. The International Cricket Council seem to me
the logical body to conduct such investigations. It is fairly obvious
that they should take more of a hand in the matter."
Wasim Akram, one of the players under suspicion from the inquiry,
said he wanted a meeting with the chairman of the Pakistan Board to
find out what was going on.
He said: "If there is a fair and square hearing into the allegations,
then I will go along with that, but how could the judge in the
preliminary enquiry implicate me when I was not even in the country
to answer him."
Wasim is likely to give evidence to the judicial enquiry next week,
but even if Taylor and Mark Waugh also agree to testify they face a
considerable logistical problem reaching Lahore on any Saturday in
the tour, as they would be required.
Pakistan (probable): *Aamir Sohail, Saeed Anwar,
Inzamam-ul-Haq, Salim Malik, Mohammad Wasim or Yousuf Yohanna, +Moin
Khan, Azhar Mahmood, Wasim Akram, Shoaib Akhtar, Mushtaq Ahmed,
Saqlain Mushtaq.
Australia: *MA Taylor, MJ Slater, JL Langer, ME Waugh,
SR Waugh, DS Lehmann, +IA Healey, SCG McGill, CR Miller,
GD McGrath, DW Fleming.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)