Marks V: Coups, chicanery and a whiff of cordite (19 Feb 95)
WHEN an adviser to the Prime Minister of Pakistan steps into the bribery debate you have to take notice, even if it is old Sarfraz Nawaz, more familiar to us as that cunning Northamptonshire opening bowler and former buddy of Allan Lamb
19-Feb-1995
Coups, chicanery and a whiff of cordite - Vic Marks
WHEN an adviser to the Prime Minister of Pakistan steps into the
bribery debate you have to take notice, even if it is old Sarfraz Nawaz, more familiar to us as that cunning Northamptonshire opening bowler and former buddy of Allan Lamb.
His claims, if substantiated, are as damaging to Pakistan
cricket as those directed at Salim Malik. His most startling
assertion is that Pakistan threw a one-day international against
England at Trent Bridge in 1992. If that is the case, they left
nothing to chance; England, having hit a monumental total of 363,
won that game by 198 runs. Javed Miandad, Sarfraz`s potential witness, was the captain of the touring party, but missed
the match with a stomach upset. He was replaced as captain by
Salim Malik.
Sarfraz paints a picture of corruption and intrigue that
makes the issue of ball-tampering seem like an inconsequential
scratch on the surface of a more sinister malaise. Pakistan
cricket comes under the closest scrutiny, and once again their
cricket board and their players feel isolated and, no doubt,
persecuted. They are already incensed by the allegations from
Australia regarding Salim Malik.
Graham Halbish, the chief executive of the Australian Cricket
Board, maintains that the relationship between his board and that
of Pakistan remains `cordial`, and that next winter`s tour of
Australia by Pakistan will go ahead unhindered. Well, he
must share the same bizarre sense of humor as Mushtaq
Mohammed displayed when chatting to Border at Edgbaston in 1993.
He has to be joking.
The allegations, conspicuously not so far denied by the ACB,
that appeared last week in the Age, Melbourne`s broadsheet daily
paper, could hardly be more explosive. It is claimed that
Pakistan`s national captain offered bribes to Australian cricketers to lose a Test match. Specifically, the paper stated that
Shane Warne and Tim May have informed the ACB that Salim Malik
offered them bribes in the region of pounds 30,000 to last year.
Moreover, Mark Waugh has said that he was offered around pounds
50,000 by a bookmaker if he threw away his wicket cheaply in the
same match.
Javed Burki, a former Test captain and current member of the
Pakistan board, is understandably `very angry` at the way the ACB
has handled the affair. `Why is it,` he said, `that after five
months we hear about it in the Australian press? Do they think we
are all crooks on the Pakistan board?` He will be seeking explanations in London this week.
Salim Malik, who has been leading Pakistan in Zimbabwe, has emphatically denied the accusations. Beyond the diplomatic gobbledegook there is more cordite than cordiality in the relationship between the Pakistan and Australian cricket boards at the
moment.
The whole affair is bewildering. In my experience, which includes a tour of Pakistan in 1984 when other `scandals` predominated, bribery has never been an issue. In English domestic
cricket the maverick Younis Ahmed was dismissed by Worcestershire for placing a bet on his opponents in 1983. There
have been claims of collusion between English county sides - most
recently between Essex and Lancashire in 1991 - which were unproven, but worthy of investigation. But I have never come across
any suggestion of match-fixing or of money changing hands at
international level, though I never played in Sharjah. This
seems not to have been the experience of Sarfraz Nawaz.
Clearly the curse of betting has impinged on Pakistani cricket.
Leaving aside Sarfraz`s claims, why would the team manager, Intikhab Alam, and the former captain, Imran Khan, check any alleged attempts at a betting coup in Sharjah three years ago if
the threat was not real? Before Pakistan met India in the final
of the Sharjah Cup, Intikhab and Imran put the players` earnings
- about $ 20,000 ( pounds 13,000) - on Pakistan to win, to ensure
that there was no skullduggery (Pakistan duly won). Why else
would Salim Malik find it necessary to ask his team twice in recent months to swear on the Koran that they had not taken bribes?
Yet to imagine that Salim Malik, a Test cricketer for 13
years, should be so naive as to offer bribes to his opponents
beggars belief. Mind you, it seems equally absurd that a Pakistan
captain should accuse an umpire of ball-tampering, which is precisely the course of action taken by Salim Malik in Harare.
Conspiracy theories abound in Pakistan cricket, and not all of
them are generated by Sarfraz. Salim was appointed captain
after a players` revolt terminated Wasim Akram`s brief tenure. In
Harare, Salim did not rule out the possibility that the rumors
had stemmed from those opposed to his leadership.
But these detractors are unlikely to include Shane Warne or Tim
May. Indeed, assuming the reports in the Age are accurate, what
incentive is there for Warne and May to fabricate their allegations? None at all. There is no hint of the tawdry chequebook journalism which was employed last year when allegations of
match fixing between Essex and Lancashire came to light. Curiouser and curiouser.
Naturally, both Warne and May denied being tempted by the
bribes, and at least the match in question remains untarnished.
Pakistan won that Test in Karachi by one wicket, thanks to a
thrilling last -wicket partnership of 57 between Inzamam and
Mushtaq Ahmed. Mark Waugh scored 81 runs in the game and Shane
Warne, who took eight wickets, was named man of the match. No
suggestion of match-fixing there, since it would be impossible to
stage manage such a finish in front of the cameras and the attendant media.
In more humble surroundings, chicanery can be attempted.
Indeed last summer the captain of a side that plays in
Yorkshire`s Quaid-e-Azam League invented a match, which had, in
fact, been called off. He submitted a detailed report outlining
how the opposition had been bowled out for 91 and how his team
had knocked off the runs for the loss of three wickets. Unfortunately - for him - his ruse was scuppered when members of his
team were spotted watching other games in the Bradford area.
We can laugh at such outrageous attempts at match-fixing, but the
claims that surfaced last week are serious. Sarfraz`s allegations cannot be ignored, nor can those from Australia. Salim
Malik, in particular, has to be exonerated - or exposed - once
the official investigations of the International Cricket Conference are complete.
I would not like to bet on their findings, but, by all accounts, someone east of Taunton will have already opened a book
on the outcome.
Source :: The Observer