Random acts of violence
As Zinedine Zidane so memorably demonstrated in Sunday's football World Cup final, tempers can fray rather easily in the world of competitive sport. With that in mind, Cricinfo presents eleven instances when emotions spilled over into something more drama
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Combative, abrasive and among the greatest players of their generation, Lillee and Miandad could have been two peas from the same pod. Instead they developed into the bitterest of adversaries, and at Perth in November 1981 they became embroiled in what Wisden described as "one of the most undignified incidents in Test history". The blame, by common consent, lay with Lillee, although naturally each man offered a different version of events. The eyewitness account was that Miandad set off for a single, Lillee stepped into his path, and after a tangle of limbs and insults, the two were caught on camera primed for a full-on scrap - Lillee with his fist raised like a prize fighter, Miandad with his bat coiled like a cobra. Tony Crafter, the umpire, was a brave man to intervene. Lillee was fined Aus$200, later reduced to $120 plus a two-match ban.
This was arguably the most infamous incident in the history of Indian domestic cricket. Lamba and Rashid had been needling each other throughout a fractious final, but it was on the final afternoon that tempers finally snapped. North Zone were already assured of the title having amassed a huge 729 for 9 in their first innings, with Lamba's 180 an integral performance. Rashid decided to take some measure of revenge. "It was senseless, yet far from unprovoked," wrote Wisden, as Rashid aimed a beamer at Lamba's head, then followed up by uprooting a stump and chasing the stunned batsman all the way to the boundary. A crowd riot ensued, unsurprisingly, and both men were banned for their actions, Rashid for 13 months and Lamba for 10. Tragically, in 1998, Lamba was killed on the cricket field, after being struck on the temple while fielding at forward short-leg in a club match in Bangladesh.
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Holding's toys-out-of-the-pram moment merely set a precedent for the West Indians on that ugly tour. Nine days later, the teams reconvened at Christchurch but a further spate of disputed catches all but led to a petulant abandonment of the tour. Instead the West Indians reluctantly agreed to continue, and on the fourth day it was Croft's turn to have a hissy-fit. Having sworn at the umpire, Fred Goodall, for another not-out decision, he was then no-balled for a series of bouncers. So Croft knocked the bails off as he walked back to his mark, then dropped his shoulder as he ran in for the next ball and barged straight into Goodall. "It hurt for a while," Goodall recalled. "I told [Clive] Lloyd I have taken some treatment from players in my time, but it has always been verbal." Croft's next over went for 15 and he was put out to pasture for the rest of the day.
The build-up to last summer's Ashes was prolonged by an endless diet of one-day internationals, matches that would have seemed utterly meaningless but for the opportunity to score points ahead of the main event.
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Ilott and Croft's handbags at dusk were a storm in a teacup compared to some of the other incidents in this list, but a decade ago, dust-ups in English cricket were still rare enough to be considered front-page news, especially when the TV cameras were gathered around for a semi-final as epic as this. Glamorgan had posted an imposing 301 in their 60 overs of the NatWest Trophy, but by 8.10pm with the light fading rapidly, Essex were firmly on course. They needed six runs with two wickets in hand, but Ilott appealed for bad light and the umpires agreed - a decision which incensed his good friend Croft. With their wives watching together from the stands, the pair pushed and bickered in the middle, and were each fined £1000 for their actions. In mitigation, two earlier incidents had cranked up the tension - Darren Thomas's accidental beamer to Stuart Law, and Thomas's celebratory punch upon dismissing Ronnie Irani ... which Irani happened to walk into as he left the pitch. Essex eventually won by one wicket the following morning.
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Last year, Udal enjoyed a fruitful Indian summer to his career when he was picked to make his Test debut at the age of 37, a full decade after he last came into the international reckoning. Up until then, however, he had been unfulfilled and at times frustrated, as demonstrated by a three-year ban from club cricket in Surrey, following an undignified contretemps in a league match. He was found found guilty of "physical violence on and threats to an opposition player", after squaring up to Cranleigh's Alex Wyatt. "It does take a lot to get me riled," Udal later claimed. "When I was batting, one of the opposition players severely insulted one of my team-mates. A minor fracas took place with a bit of pushing and shoving, but there was no fighting and certainly no punches were thrown." Cranleigh's version of events differed significantly, as the severity of the punishment would indicate.
Never let it be said that cricket is a game to be taken lightly. A club match in Colombo turned to tragedy in January 2004 after the umpire, Mohamed Aboosali Pasreen, 18, made an ill-judged reaction to a bowler's boastful comment. Pasreen, along with a group of about 15 other youths, had been playing in a field owned by a local teacher, when a bowler known only as Humsad, 21, declared to the gathering that he was bowling as well as Mushtaq Ahmed. Ill-advisedly, Pasreen scoffed at this lofty claim, so Humsad uprooted a stump and beat him over the head. Bleeding from the mouth, Pasreen was taken to the Kurunegala Hospital and then on to the National Hospital where he died. The Coroner returned a verdict of homicide.
When a new marble statue of Margaret Thatcher was unveiled at London's Guildhall Gallery in the summer of 2002, it did not meet with universal approval. So Paul Kelleher, in what he later described as "an act of satirical humour", set out to decapitate it. His implement of choice would have been a baseball bat, but upon realising he would never get it through security, he settled instead for a cricket bat, which just "pinged off" her head. With that, he dispensed with all subtlety and reached instead for a metal stanchion. It proved more successful. The prosecuting barrister, John Hardy, while admitting that Kelleher's actions might have been met with the "sneaking approval" of some, added: "the fact that one is a man of principle does not entitle one to go around committing acts of wanton destruction." He was jailed for three months.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo