Referee skips duty for personal glory
The last day of the Patron's Trophy Grade-I National Cricket Championship was dominated by a bizarre incident Sunday when Mahmood Rasheed, the match referee at the PIA-PWD tie, breached the Pakistan Cricket Board rules by dereliction of duty
Khalid H. Khan
12-Nov-2001
The last day of the Patron's Trophy Grade-I National Cricket
Championship was dominated by a bizarre incident Sunday when
Mahmood Rasheed, the match referee at the PIA-PWD tie,
breached the Pakistan Cricket Board rules by dereliction of
duty.
Mahmood, younger brother of ex-Test batsman Haroon Rasheed
and a former first-class cricketer himself, instead of
completing the final day's rituals left everyone in the
lurch at UBL Sports Complex.
The referee apparently decided to give priority to an
otherwise inconsequential final of a veterans tournament -
organized by a controversial group - since he was a key
player of one of the teams.
Raees Ahmed, who is also on the PCB panel of match referees,
took over from Mahmood after some 45 minutes of play when
the latter left for Clifton.
According to sources, Mahmood had presumably taken prior
permission from one of the Cricket Management Committee's
city-based members to make himself unavailable Sunday.
A referee, who is the liaison between the umpires and
players, has to ensure that the match for which he is
appointed is completed in a fair and friendly environment.
In between, he can't skip the match unless in exceptional
circumstances, such as illness or a family-related problem
etc.
Therefore, Mahmood's action had clearly violated the rules
prescribed by the PCB since he was neither ill nor was there
any emergency where the referee's presence was needed. In
Mahmood's case, the only reason was personal satisfaction.
Just last week, Sajid Abbasi, a match referee, turned down a
similar request to make himself available for another
veterans game because he was supervising the PWD-Allied Bank
fixture at the same venue.
Coincidentally, Mahmood, who was allotted just one Patron's
Trophy, had failed to pass the referees' examination
conducted by Pakistan's representative on the ICC panel of
match referees, Col Naushad Ali, here sometime ago.
Efforts to contact Mahmood proved fruitless at the time of
filing the report as he was busy playing at Asghar Ali Shah
Stadium in a night tournament!