'Indian bookie approached SA player in 2005'
SA manager Goolam Raja says player was approached on 2005 tour of India, asked for line-up
Andrew Miller in St Kitts
23-Mar-2007
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Goolam Raja, the South African manager, has revealed that one of his players was approached by a bookmaker during South Africa's one-day tour of India in November 2005.
Responding to a query about speculation that Bob Woolmer may have been about to write a book that lifted the lid on the match-fixing scandal, Raja admitted that there had been an "innocent" incident involving a member of his squad. Although he declined to name the player involved, Raja added that the player was not a member of the current World Cup party.
"The question was just 'What is the team tomorrow?'," explained Raja.
"In the past we would easily say, 'Joe Soap is not playing', but no
longer. Now we don't announce the team, whether it is picked or not.
"The players are trained to phone as soon as they've been approached, not to get into any discussion with these people, only to take their phone details and pass it onto the authorities. Nothing happened other than that one phone call.
"That is the protocol. If a player is approached, he has to let us
know immediately because we have a system for dealing with it."
South African cricket still feels the scars of the Hansie Cronje
scandal in 2000, although Raja insisted that the players were older
and wiser for the experience. "There's a lot more awareness now than
there was five years ago. The players are aware that there are people
out there who are interested in finding out things we know, and the
players are more cautious. Sometimes we took things for granted in the
past, because we never thought that these things would happen."
In the light of the murder investigation now underway in Jamaica, Raja
said he would welcome heightened security for his players, even if it
meant more constraints on their freedom on tour. "Absolutely, if there
is one lesson that we've learnt, it is that you can't have enough
security," said Raja. "We've made applications to beef up the
security, and ICC have assured us that that will be the case.
"I think a lot of our players have experience of the subcontinent, and
what we told them there is the same as what we've told them here. It's
a case of being vigilant. If you get a call or a knock on the door
from someone you don't know, I've told them repeatedly to please let
me know.
"At the hotel, the presence of police and plain-clothes has
increased," he added. "Of course the central police officers are
trained to look out for people in the foyers of hotels, who not
necessarily don't belong there, but look suspicious. They've been
asked to let us know."
Raja added that the news of Woolmer's murder had not been as much of a
shock to the players as the original news of his death. "The players
were saddened to hear the circumstances of Bob's death, it was such a
macabre death, but the worse was when we first heard of it," he said.
"That was a total surprise but subsequently, like everyone else,
we've been waiting for things to unfold."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo