Sourav Ganguly has hit the nail on the head. The 28-year-old Indian
captain made a most pertinent point during his TV interview the other
day. He asserted that no Code of Conduct can prevent betting and
match-fixing. Ultimately it was a question of ethics, he maintained.
"At the end of the day, cricketers have to be honest. If that is
ensured, nothing can happen," said Ganguly in the course of the
interview when asked whether match-fixing could be prevented by the
BCCI's Code of Conduct.
"No code can prevent match-fixing. The ICC and the Cricket Boards
cannot keep track of each and every player. The cricketers have to be
honest," he said. Perhaps that is easier said than done in the days
when there is so much money to be earned both through right and
dubious means. But there is an innate honesty in men and ultimately
one supposes that the unity of the cricketers is the one factor that
the bookies and the underworld dons will not be able to break. So it
is a very valid point that the Indian captain has made.
Ganguly also struck a positive note when he said he could vouch for
the 14 players now playing for India as "good and clean. They are good
and they want to make a career in cricket," he added.
Ganguly said he never had any inkling that a match was being fixed.
"As a cricketer, I never believed it. But now after what has come out
in the CBI report, I feel anything can happen," he added.
Without mentioning those involved in match-fixing, Ganguly said he
felt "sad" to hear the names revealed by CBI in its report on betting
and match-fixing. "It's really sad to know that (their involvement in
match-fixing) especially when you grow up looking up at them," Ganguly
said.
Ganguly however denied that the scandal that has rocked the cricketing
world, has in any way affected the team's performance. "We have to
stick to our cricket and go on with it and not get bothered by what
happened in the past," he said. The captain was all praise for the
Indian team saying "this is a young team. The boys have done well
leaving behind the match-fixing controversy."