Sri Lanka board denies reporting Broad
Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) have denied reporting match referee Chris Broad tothe ICC for 'boozing' with Australia's players during the recent series.Mohan de Silva, the president of SLC, claims that he was misquoted by a reporterfrom the state-run
Charlie Austin
26-Apr-2004
Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) have denied reporting match referee Chris Broad to
the ICC for "boozing" with Australia's players during the recent series.
Mohan de Silva, the president of SLC, claims that he was misquoted by a reporter
from the state-run Sunday Observer newspaper.
In an open letter to the journalist, de Silva said: "I have noted that you
by error have made a reference to me with regards to the claim that match
referee Chris Broad was found boozing with the Australian players. I wish to
state that at no time did I confirm this story and neither has Sri Lanka
Cricket reported any incident involving Mr. Broad and Australian players to
the ICC. As such it is clear that I have been misquoted in the said story."
De Silva's comments follow a terse statement from the ICC last week: "The
allegations attributed to Sri Lanka Cricket are serious and significant yet
there is not one piece of evidence offered to support them," said Malcolm
Speed, the ICC's chief executive. "There are no specifics - no places, no
dates, no times - and it is disappointing that a national board would elect
to make disparaging comments about an ICC match official without providing
any material to support these comments.
The newspaper allegations came within the context of Broad's reporting of
Muttiah Muralitharan's doosra, a decision that promoted outrage and charges
of racial bias in some quarters, but was later justified as biomechanical
tests showed that Muralitharan's arm straightened by double the legal limit.
Sri Lanka Cricket has faced increasing criticism for its handling of the
issue, including the treatment of Broad and the partial leaking of the
Muralitharan report to the Sunday Times newspaper, which forced the ICC into
making a statement on Muralitharan's doosra even before receiving the
official report.