Richard Hadlee urges sportsmanship (18 Sep 1998)
The elder statesman of New Zealand Cricket, Walter Hadlee, is dismayed by allegations of match-fixing and orchestrated appealing, which he says are damaging the game
18-Sep-1998
18 September 1998
Hadlee urges sportsmanship
The Christchurch Press
The elder statesman of New Zealand Cricket, Walter Hadlee, is dismayed
by allegations of match-fixing and orchestrated appealing, which he
says are damaging the game.
Speaking to the 104th annual meeting of NZC in Christchurch yesterday
Hadlee, a former New Zealand captain and board chairman, made a plea
for the return of greater sportsmanship in the game.
"Umpires must be given every support to stamp out insidious practices
in the game.
"The game is at a troubled stage with what we have been hearing and
reading in recent weeks. It is of great concern."
He referred to the allegations of match-rigging charged against
several Pakistan cricketers last week, and the recent England-South
Africa test series was marred by controversy over umpiring decisions.
"It all boils down to sportsmanship I suppose."
Hadlee said in his era if catches were not taken properly the
fieldsman signalled they had not been taken cleanly.
He recalled an incident in 1951 when New Zealand played England and
batsman Cyril Washbrook was recalled after a stifled leg before wicket
appeal from Fen Cresswell.
"Fen started to appeal but then realised Cyril had got an edge. He was
given out but the team called him back."
The annual meeting was a quiet affair with no general business.
Peter Sharp and Brigit Hearn, both from Canterbury, are newcomers to
the board, filling the positions vacated by Bryan Preston and Lesley
Murdoch respectively. Hearn was selected by a panel ahead of former
New Zealand captain Sarah Illingworth, who was also nominated.
Iain Gallaway, of Dunedin, was re-elected president for a second term.
He was the only person nominated.
Source :: The Christchurch Press (https://www.press.co.nz/)