Cricket Focus (18 July 1999)
The suspended chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board yesterday denied allegations of match-fixing in this year's World Cup and alleged a "conspiracy" against the board and Pakistan's players
18-Jul-1999
18 July 1999
Cricket Focus
The Electronic Telegraph
The suspended chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board yesterday
denied allegations of match-fixing in this year's World Cup and
alleged a "conspiracy" against the board and Pakistan's players.
Khalid Mehmood said 'a lobby' had targeted the board and
Pakistan's players after their crushing defeat to Australia in last
month's final at Lord's. Pakistan's government announced on Friday
that they had suspended the entire PCB pending an investigation
into allegations that the team deliberately lost.
Mehmood said: "The team performed very well except one bad
game. You cannot sack the whole board for it. None of the matches
in the World Cup was fixed. It is ridiculous."
The BBC'S hopes of gaining a crumb of televisual cricketing
comfort by covering the proposed new 25-over league next
year could be scuppered by the involvement of CGU.
Representatives of the insurance company have been
included on a working party set up to form the league. Sky
have the rights to the CGU National League and any
sponsorship for the 25-over competition would be likely to
come under their existing TV agreement.
Cricketers have found some unlikely ways to get injured - Derek
Pringle once put his back out writing a letter - but Mike Roseberry
took the biscuit when he missed Middlesex's defeat by Essex at
Southend in unusual circumstances.
Roseberry damaged a shoulder lifting a flower pot, an affliction
made more mysterious by the fact that he lives in a third-floor flat
with no garden. Middlesex, who have banned Roseberry from
Homebase, hope that he and his geraniums recover quickly.
Bulmer's cider chose the wrong man to toast their
successful results over the last year when they held a
photo-shoot at Lord's on Tuesday - complete with his bottle
of Scrumpy Jack, which remained untouched, was Mark
Ramprakash, one of only two teetotallers in the England side.
The other? Edgbaston hero Alex Tudor who, while pictured
with a glass of champagne after his 99 not out, did not sip any
of it.
A steward's inquiry is planned into the Essex players' Open
golf sweep if Ernie Els should make a challenge for the title
today. It has been alleged that the sweep was nobbled by a
customer who turned down the corner of the Els entry to
make sure he picked it out. Physiotherapist James Davis
denies the charge. . .
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)