Roebuck P: Bribery scandal may jeopardize World Cup (12 Feb 95)
Peter Roebuck in Sydney on match-fixing allegations involving two prominent Australian Test cricketers
12-Feb-1995
Bribery storm hits Pakistan - Peter Roebuck
Peter Roebuck in Sydney on match-fixing allegations involving two
prominent Australian Test cricketers.
ALLEGATIONS have been made that a man prominent and active in
Pakistan cricket attempted to bribe two Australian Test players,
Shane Warne and Tim May, to ``throw`` the first Test in Karachi
last September. The approach was rejected but, if it is confirmed, the ramifications for next year`s World Cup could be profound.
The two spinners, it is claimed, were offered US$50,000 each,
although there are rumours that the figure was twice that.
They were shrewd choices because they could have thrown the game
by bowling badly on a turning pitch. No other players were as
likely to influence the course of the match. In the event, it
was played with no hint of foul play and was described by Dickie
Bird as the greatest of the 61 he had umpired up to that point.
Pakistan secured a famous victory by dint of a last-wicket stand
of 57, ensuring the only decisive result of the series.
Another approach was reportedly made before the third Test in
Lahore and again Warne and May would have nothing to do with it.
Nor did they mention the matter to anyone outside the dressing
room. Not until the match was in progress did Col Egar, the Australian manager, hear word of funny business afoot and his informant was not an Australian player.
Warne and May, who were on opposing sides in a one-day match
between Victoria and South Australia in Melbourne yesterday, both
kept their counsel. When May was approached by the Sydney Morning Herald on Friday for comment, he was reported to have refused
to discuss the subject, saying: ``It`s something too big.``
That may prove all too true. Should the rumours sweeping the
Australian dressing room be found to have any basis in fact, the
naming of the principal party in the affair could have explosive
consequences, so prominent a figure is he in Pakistan cricket.
Graham Halbish, the chief executive of the Australian Cricket
Board, admitted that ``a number of players were approached`` and
that he had held confidential discussions with them in recent
months, although he declined to reveal their identities or the
contents of their statements. ``The ACB is very concerned,`` he
said. ``I have also spoken with Col Egar and Bob Simpson and we
are all absolutely confident none of our players have ever taken
a bribe.`` Egar said of the Karachi offer: ``I was informed that
it was knocked back and the blokes turned around and said `piss
off`.``
The charges have also been discussed with David Richards, the
chief executive of the International Cricket Council, who has
been informed by the ACB that it believes the matter should be
dealt with by the game`s governing body.
Arif Ali Abbasi, a member of the Pakistan board of control expressed complete surprise: ``It`s an allegation and it`s very
late in coming. This never took place. Why this afterthought?
What it amounts to is lack of management on behalf of the Australians because they never mentioned this to me and we have had
such good relations with the Australian board.
``Are the Australians implying that the match in Karachi was
thrown by the Australian team? If so, it looks more like an Australian cover-up. I have known Col Egar for a very long time and
we have spoken regularly recently and he never mentioned this
business. Throwing a match is extremely difficult and would need
the connivance of the whole team and not just two people.``
Asif Iqbal, the former Pakistan captain, is adamant that the
guilty party must be identified and brought to book: ``It is not
enough for the Australians to say this has happened. I find both
the rumours and the response inadequate. People should name
names and we should have a proper investigation. Betting is
part of cricket and takes place all over the world whether official or unofficial.``
Iqbal also stressed that allegations of this nature are far
from uncommon: ``The first time I heard rumours of that kind was
in 1980 when I captained Pakistan in India and lost 2-0. After
that, there were rumours that we had been paid money to lose. It
was, of course, ridiculous. These rumours have regularly resurfaced, particularly when India and Pakistan play in Sharjah and
whenever a team loses it is alleged to have taken bribes.``
The most recent rumours emanated from a one-day tournament in Sri
Lanka last year involving Australia, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The Pakistan board responded by banning mobile telephones
from the dressing room and launching an inquiry.
Should the current allegations be substantiated, the repercussions, it scarcely needs adding, could be far-reaching for
next year`s World Cup in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
The alarm bells, in fact, have been clanging for some time. A
body set up by the Pakistan government to promote the event is
alleged to be dominated by less than reputable characters, while
a battle over television rights has led to a bitter court action
between the Indian board of control and the state-controlled network, Doordarshan.
Controversy and Pakistan cricket, moreover, are not exactly
strangers. Although the charges were never proven, national disgrace was heaped on Waqar Younis and the then Test captain, Wasim
Akram, following allegations that they smoked marijuana on a
beach in Grenada while touring the West Indies in 1993. Later
that year, Sarfraz Nawaz, the former Test fast bowler, failed to
win a libel action he brought in the High Court against his
erstwhile Northamptonshire colleague, Allan Lamb, who had accused
him of teaching his compatriots the art of ball-tampering.
The ball-tampering issue had first surfaced during a one-day
international between England and Pakistan at Lord`s in 1992,
after which Lamb claimed the tourists had defaced the ball in
search of reverse swing. While the offending article was locked
away in an MCC committee room and has never been released for
scrutiny, subsequent television evidence of other matches involving Pakistan has supported Lamb`s claims.
The wisdom of staging the game`s biggest showpiece on the
sub-continent has often been questioned; this latest body blow is
unlikely to temper the scepticism.
Source :: Sunday Times