C Martin-Jenkins: Illingworth Succeeds in Clearing His Name (4 Sep 1996)
RAY ILLINGWORTH succeeded in clearing his name yesterday
04-Sep-1996
Wednesday 4 September 1996
Illingworth succeeds in clearing his name
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
RAY ILLINGWORTH succeeded in clearing his name yesterday. A
panel of four, hearing his appeal to the Cricket Council against
a 2,000 fine by the Test and County Cricket Board in June over
newspaper articles from his book One Man Committee, rescinded
both the fine and the 500 costs.
The hearing at Lord`s, which lasted from 10.30am to 4.20pm,
ended with Illingworth`s solicitor, Michael Lawrence, reporting
that all charges had been dropped. He said: "The fine has been
rescinded and the costs have gone as well."
Illingworth added: "I didn`t want to leave the game with a
disrepute charge hanging over me. As far as I`m concerned, my
name has been cleared."
The Cricket Council panel was chaired by Judge Desmond
Perrett, QC, and also included the former Middlesex captain, J.
J. Warr, the former TCCB chairman, Frank Chamberlain, and the
chairman of the National Cricket Association, Frank Elliott.
They found that the articles had not put the interests or
reputation of cricket at risk and that though the chairman had
disclosed confidential selection matters without the Board`s
permission, this, too, had "not prejudiced the interests of
cricket nor brought the game into disrepute".
It has been a costly business for the Board in holding two
hearings at Lord`s. They brought the trouble on themselves by
choosing to try their chairman of selectors instead of merely
voicing their disapproval that his book, with its free but mild
discussion on the events of his three years in office, had come
out before his retirement.
Certainly they should have waited until later this month, but
the Board would have been on firmer ground if they had not
exonerated the England fast bowler, Devon Malcolm, for his own,
much more obvious, breach of contract. Malcolm`s
sensationally presented newspaper articles after the South
African tour were fiercely critical of Illingworth`s
management.
There was wrong on all sides caused by a combination of human
greed, media exploitation and administrative incompetence, but
it ought to have been a dead issue once Malcolm was told that he
had no case to answer. Having broken his tour contract and got
away with it, it was a clear injustice for Illingworth to have
been fined for a milder breach, as yesterday`s verdict
implies.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph