ICC meeting full of sound & fury signifying nothing
The emergency meeting of the ICC was, as expected, full of sound and fury but the bottom-line was that it signified nothing
Omar Kureishi
10-May-2000
The emergency meeting of the ICC was, as expected, full of sound and
fury but the bottom-line was that it signified nothing. The stable
door was being shut long after the horse had bolted. If the bookies
had operated with impunity in the past, they will be a little less
brazen from now on. The pledges that cricketers will have to undertake
are reminiscent of the "loyalty oaths" that government servants were
made to take during the McCarthy witch-hunt in the United States. Some
purpose might have been served if the punishments and penalties
prescribed were to apply retroactively.
There are three known cases of players who have admitted to having
links with the bookies, Shane Warne, Mark Waugh and more recently
Hansie Cronje. The two Australians have virtually gone scot-free,
token fines were imposed and as of now, Hansie Cronje has been
stripped of the captaincy and the South Africans have appointed a
judicial commission. Though Cronje's case may be different because it
is the Delhi police that is building up the case and we will have to
wait and see how that turns out.
The ICC gave a clean bill of health to Jagmohan Dalymia which was
expected. In any case awarding of television contracts do not come
within the purview of match-fixing. That would come within the purview
of abuse of office for personal financial gain and one can't help
feeling that the allegations against him are merely a continuation of
a kind of tribal feud between him and Mr Bindra, the former BCCI
chief.
What I am surprise about is the apparent silence of Dr Ali Bacher. He
had claimed that he had information from credible sources and he would
lay this information or evidence before the ICC. I don't know whether
he did or whether he was asked to do so. He may have claimed to have
been misquoted by the Australian newspaper but he does not deny that
he gave the interview. His statement that two of the World Cup matches
had been "fixed" and his accusations against Javed Akhtar got
considerable international publicity. A simple retraction was not
enough. There should have been an unconditional apology. Clearly the
ICC wanted to get tough with the players while handling their own with
soft hands.
So far, it has been the players who have borne the brunt of
match-fixing allegations. Cricket board officials and even umpires
have escaped suspicion. In the free-for-all it is assumed that only
players can fix matches or give vital information to bookies. By
making the players the centre of attraction, the field of
investigation has been narrowed. But after all is said and done, more
will be said than done. During World War-2, people were discouraged
from making unnecessary railway trips and I remember seeing posters
stuck up at public places that asked the question: "Is your Journey
Really Necessary?" This is the question that I would like to ask all
the distinguished gentlemen who gathered at Lord's: was their journey
really necessary?"
What is extremely disturbing is serious allegations that are being
levelled by Mr Bindra and he appears to be showing a crusader's
zeal. What these allegations have done is to have brought match-fixing
to India and deflected attention away from South Africa. I am frankly
surprised that Kapil Dev's name has been mentioned and since the
former Indian cricket captain and the present coach has decided to
take legal action, I would not like to comment on it. I think it is
the right procedure. Let the law courts decide. This is what I had
recommended to some of the Pakistan players when their names were
being bandied about. I had told them that their battle should not be
fought in the media: if an accuser was confident enough, let him bring
his proof to a court of law and if the accused was confident of his
innocence, he too should seek redress from a court of law.
But it is important that we should not let match-fixing become an
obsession and we should go back to enjoying cricket. The Asia Cup is
round the corner and in the meantime Pakistan will have played their
first Test match against the West Indies at Guyana. When I switched on
the television to watch the first day's play I suffered something of a
culture-shock. Who were these elegant people dressed in white? And
what had happened to those dressed like clowns? Then I realised that I
was watching Test cricket, the real thing and also how much I had
missed it. Even the umpires were smartly turned out and did not look
pall-bearers. The tempo was slower though not the pace of Ambrose and
Walsh and Wasim Akram. One saw the posting of four slips and a gully
and a cluster of fielders around the bat as Mushtaq weaved his
magic. I realised that when I complained of too much cricket, what I
really meant was that there was not enough Test cricket. Test cricket,
I am told by the young cricket fan, is boring. I accept that because
ballet would be boring too for his generation. But ballet has survived
and will survive and the present fads will not. But having said that
let me also say that a hundred by Inzamamul Haq in any version of
cricket is a thing of beauty.