Tragedy at the World Cup
Paul Newman on the death of Bob Woolmer
Paul Newman
15-Apr-2008
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His mood was sombre as he ordered lasagne and apple pie with ice cream
from room service on the evening of March 17. Bob Woolmer sat alone
and, according to Deirdre Harvey, the waitress who brought him his last
meal, looked desperately sad. "His eyes were red, like somebody who had
been crying," she said later.
Woolmer knew all about cricketing disappointment. In his time as coach
at Warwickshire, with South Africa through the Hansie Cronje years, and
now at Pakistan, the most mercurial team of all, he had seen just about
everything. But only South Africa being knocked out by Australia in the
1999 World Cup semi-final compared with losing to Ireland, and with it
early elimination for one of the favourites, at the World Cup in 2007.
On the streets of Multan, Inzamam-ul-Haq's home city, they were already
burning effigies of him and chanting "Death to Woolmer". At the post-match
press conference at Sabina Park in Kingston, Woolmer had been asked: "Are
you going to resign?" He replied: "I'd like to sleep on that one." He answered
each probing question with his usual courtesy, making sure he praised the
ICC development programme - which he himself had pioneered with the
very object of bringing Associate Members up to the standard of the Test-playing
nations.
Then, in what was to be his last interview, he all but told Alison Mitchell
of BBC Radio that he was finished as Pakistan coach. "I asked him if he
had made up his mind to go," she said. "He gave me a half-smile and nod,
but clearly he wanted to play it by the book. Bob did not look like a man
who was unduly stressed. And he didn't appear ill. I remember thinking,
'this man has got the patience of a saint' during the main press conference.
He was so helpful to everybody."
Woolmer retreated to his room, number 374, at the end of a musty corridor
on the 12th floor of the Pegasus Hotel, a 17-storey skyscraper with 300
rooms in what passes for a luxurious area of Kingston. Next door was Danish
Kaneria, Pakistan's spin bowler and, as the only Hindu in a team of Muslims,
something of a man apart himself. Across the corridor was the room of
Brian Lara, one of the greatest players the game has known, now coming
to the end of his West Indian career.
The tired old hotel was alive with the cricketing community, but for
Pakistan there was simply despair. The trip back to the hotel had been made
in virtual silence - no rows, no recriminations. The only sound that could
be heard, according to the bus driver Bertram Carr, came from Woolmer:
"He was coughing all the way back to the hotel," said Carr. After they
arrived back at the Pegasus, as the Ireland team decamped to Ocho Rios for
the mother and father of all St Patrick's Day celebrations, the Pakistanis
went their separate ways, mainly to their rooms. Woolmer had a drink in
the bar with Ian Gould, once a county opponent, now an umpire, then retired
alone upstairs.
Room 374 was just like hundreds of others Woolmer would have known
in his globe-trotting career. Functional, in need of a lick of paint, but perfectly
comfortable. In it were two bottles of champagne purchased by a Pakistan
fan at Heathrow airport en route to Jamaica and given to Woolmer, something
of a wine buff, by his assistant coach Mushtaq Ahmed. One bottle was later
found empty, the other with the seal unbroken. The lasagne, half-eaten, was
found on a tray outside his room. Woolmer, as was his wont, struggled to
rest. A large man, he had recently been diagnosed with diabetes. It was later
discovered that his heart weighed an abnormally heavy 520 grams, with an
enlarged left ventricle and a distinct narrowing of the coronary arteries:
three-quarters of diabetics die of heart attacks. He also suffered from sleep
apnoea, which meant he would stop breathing in his sleep unless he wore
a mask attached to a machine that kept his air passages open.
As a coach Woolmer was always at the forefront of technology. He was
a disciple of the laptop and modern coaching methods before they were
fashionable. His computer was constantly at his side and, as he wrestled
with his thoughts and contemplated, at 58, the end of a coaching appointment
that his wife Gill told friends she had never wanted him to take, he decided
to surf the net and send some emails, his favourite form of communication.
A computer expert who later analysed the laptop found that Woolmer also
talked online with a friend who was running a sustainable-development
project in South Africa.
At 8.12 p.m. local time, Woolmer sent an email to Gill, who was home
in Cape Town. "Hi darling," it started, "feeling a little depressed currently
as you might imagine. I am not sure which is worse, being knocked out in
the semi-final at Edgbaston or now in the first round. Our batting performance
was abysmal and my worst fears were realised. I could tell the players were
for some reason not able to fire themselves up." He went on to say that he
was glad he did not have to travel to Guyana, and was looking forward to
seeing his family again. "I hope your day was better but I doubt it as you
were probably watching. Not much more to add I'm afraid but I still love
you lots."
Fourteen hours and 18 minutes after pressing the send button on his
computer Woolmer was found dead in that Kingston hotel room, discovered
slumped in the bathroom by a maid after being conspicuous by his absence
from breakfast the following morning.
Here was an event almost beyond comprehension: the World Cup in the
West Indies was supposed to be a carnival of all that was good in the game.
Now it would take on a completely different dimension. The cricket was
quickly forgotten, and instead the World Cup became an investigation into
the untimely death of one of the game's famous figures.
At first everybody assumed Woolmer had died of natural causes. Aside
from his health problems, there was the stress of coaching Pakistan at a
time that included the forfeiture of a Test at The Oval in a ball-tampering
scandal and a drug-taking controversy involving Shoaib Akhtar and
Mohammad Asif - surely a heart attack had to be the most probable cause?
Yet, as the cricket community grieved, a much more disturbing, menacing
scenario was emerging. By the Tuesday after the Sunday when Woolmer
suffered the most lonely of deaths, a post-mortem had proved inconclusive,
and Jamaican police announced that his death was being treated as suspicious.
By the Thursday, March 22, a Jamaican journalist by the name of Rohan
Powell sensationally claimed on television that Woolmer had been strangled.
That very day police launched a murder investigation. "The pathologist's
report states that Mr Woolmer's death was due to asphyxiation as a result
of manual strangulation," said Karl Angell, a police spokesman. "In these
circumstances the matter is now being treated by the police as murder."
But why? Why would anyone want to kill such a respected figure? Those
well versed in the darker side of the game would quickly say why. The
spectre of match-fixing has been the biggest threat to cricket's future ever
since its existence was uncovered in the mid-1990s. Woolmer had been coach of South Africa during the years when it emerged that Cronje had
sold the game out by becoming involved with bookmakers. Now he was
the coach of a nation that had been closely connected to a phenomenon
that struck at the very heart of sport. Sarfraz Nawaz is regarded as a
maverick, an eccentric: but the cricket community, at least on this occasion,
had to take notice of the former Pakistan bowler and ex-member of the
Punjab Assembly when he said Woolmer had been killed by the "matchfixing
mafia".
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While ICC officials were debating whether the World Cup should continue,
a central figure entered the drama, the public face of the murder investigation.
A man who was to take enthusiastically to the spotlight. His name was Mark
Shields, 48, described as a former Scotland Yard
"high flyer" whose globe-trotting police career had
taken in working against the Russian mafia, Swiss
money-launderers and the IRA. The truth about
his career was actually a little more prosaic, and
Shields had spent much of his time not at Scotland
Yard but with the City of London police. Now he
was deputy commissioner of the Jamaican police in Kingston - which has
one of the highest murder rates in the world - far away from fraud and
financial crimes.
It was known that Woolmer was working on two books, one a coaching
manual with Tim Noakes, a South African sports scientist, and the other an
updated version of his autobiography, with his friend Ivo Tennant, a Times
journalist. Could he have been about to lift the lid on match-fixing, having
been involved with Cronje and in the murky world of Pakistani cricket? And
could he have been silenced before he had the chance to do so? No, said
Noakes. No, said Tennant. "We hadn't discussed including match-fixing, and
I don't think we were going to," continued Tennant. "I am convinced Bob
knew nothing about what Hansie was up to."
Could Woolmer have been thinking, however, about a third book,
specifically about his time in Pakistani cricket? And could it have been news
of that which got back to very dangerous ears? Edward Craig, deputy editor
of The Wisden Cricketer, said that Woolmer was "pretty excited about doing
a book on Pakistan because there was some pretty interesting stuff that he
was going to write. There were drug allegations, there were ball-tampering
allegations. There were also religious differences in that side." Osman
Samiuddin, the Pakistan editor of Cricinfo, said that Woolmer had asked for
his help in covering what he described as "probably one of the more
interesting periods of my cricket career". Samiuddin said he had received
an email from Woolmer saying that he would only begin on that project
after the World Cup. "I believe the story is worth telling," the email continued,
"and has to be told in the correct way."
Allan Donald, a friend and colleague of Woolmer's, passionately called
for the World Cup to be cancelled immediately. Others eloquently put into
words what so many were thinking: how can the "festival of cricket" carry
on at such a time? In the end it did, as the show always must, as a tribute to Bob Woolmer. Sadly, it provided little cricketing drama and joie de vivre
in his name.
Shields, meanwhile, came galloping to the fore. Theories were everywhere,
all of them chilling and barely comprehensible. If Woolmer was the victim
of gangsters, this might explain why there were no obvious signs of injury.
Was he forced into the bathroom and strangled with the aid of a towel to
cover up thumbprints or the burn marks that a ligature would have left? Or
was he first rendered helpless, possibly with chloroform or with drugs in
his food?
Match-fixing was never far away from anyone's thoughts. It was not just
as simple as Pakistani players "throwing" their game against Ireland, it was
said. Sarfraz, ever one for a conspiracy theory, claimed that Pakistan fixed
their earlier defeat against West Indies, thinking it would still be easy for
them to progress to the second round by beating Ireland and Zimbabwe,
only the ploy went terribly wrong when they found themselves up against
a highly motivated Irish side. "I feel that he was bumped off," said Sarfraz,
suddenly in danger of being vindicated for his often outrageous views. "It
was the betting mafia. Bob must have seen how the Pakistan team went
about its business. You could see it from their body language that something was amiss."
It was also pointed out that Pakistan were 20-1 on with
bookmakers to beat Ireland, who were 8-1 outsiders.
Closed-circuit television footage taken from the 12th-floor corridor was
converted from analogue to digital. Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mushtaq Ahmed and
manager Talat Ali were interviewed for a second time. Shields appeared to
have no doubts now that there had been foul play: "It would take some force
because Bob was a large man and therefore it would have taken some
significant force to subdue him and cause strangulation," he said. "One or
more people could be involved in this murder." A day later, on March 23,
it was reported that Dr Naseem Ashraf, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket
Board, had received an email sent by Woolmer in the early hours of his
final morning, but its authenticity was never proved.
While Shields remained convinced, for now, that Woolmer was killed by
"manual strangulation", allegations surfaced in the Jamaican media early in
April claiming the toxicology report stated that
samples taken from Woolmer's blood, stomach and
urine had shown the presence of a foreign
substance. An unnamed government source said
this was poison. CCTV footage was sent to
Scotland Yard for further analysis. A BBC TV
investigation claimed that the toxicology report did
indeed prove Woolmer was drugged and poisoned
with a herb called aconite. Mercifully, Woolmer's body was finally released
by the Jamaican authorities and his family were at last able to take him back
to South Africa, where he was cremated in a private ceremony near Cape
Town.
As time went on, however, the plot either thickened or thinned, depending
on your point of view. Shields went unusually quiet. There were whispers
that all was not quite as we had imagined. By May 20 police were privately
admitting that their pathologist was wrong.
In any event, by June 4, the central figure in this plot had become the
Indian-born pathologist Dr Ere Seshaiah, a man who had been kept very
busy for 12 years conducting investigations into murders in Kingston.
Seshaiah claimed to have graduated with an MD in India before becoming
a forensic pathologist in Jamaica in 1995. Before being appointed chief state
pathologist, he would normally have had to acquire a postgraduate degree,
publish papers and become a fellow of various pathology institutions, but
by his own admission he had never taken an exam in forensic pathology
since graduation.
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Shields started to backtrack. "Usually we investigate a murder and we
look for suspects, but on this occasion, because of the lack of evidence to
support the pathologist, what we've done is gone out to prove it is not a
murder," he said. "We have to go with what the pathologist gives, and if
we'd ignored it and it had turned out to be true I would have been lambasted
for not treating it seriously." On June 12 the Jamaica Constabulary Force
"confirmed" that Woolmer had died of natural causes. Three independent
pathologists, they said, had come to this conclusion. Lucius Thomas, the police commissioner, added that in further toxicology tests "no substance
was found to indicate that he was poisoned".
Seshaiah became an isolated figure, his work severely criticised by three
international pathologists. "I am sticking to my findings," he said. "He was
murdered. This is not a first for me. I have been doing autopsies in Jamaica
since 1995." But Seshaiah did not seem so sure during the six-week inquest
in October and November 2007. In his original report he stated that the
hyoid bone in Woolmer's neck was broken. But during the inquest Seshaiah
admitted to getting his original findings wrong. The hyoid bone was not
broken after all. According to one of the independent pathologists, Dr
Michael Pollanen of Canada, it is "extremely rare" for anyone to be strangled
without the hyoid bone being broken. He and the other pathologists,
Nathaniel Cary from Britain and Lorna Martin from South Africa, criticised
Seshaiah's methods as well as his findings. The bleeding in Woolmer's neck
which Seshaiah claimed was evidence of strangulation was more likely to
have been caused by Seshaiah himself (artifactual or Prinsloo-Gordon
haemorrhaging).
In the witness stand Seshaiah changed his verdict to "asphyxia secondary
to manual strangulation in association with cypermethrin poisoning". Then
he went on to admit that he did not know how much cypermethrin - an
insecticide - was in Woolmer's system. Another expert, Fitzmore Coates, a
senior forensic officer of the Jamaican government-run laboratory, claimed
the amount of it in a sample of Woolmer's stomach contents was
"significant". Yet the 3.402mg/ml he found was about a third of what is
recognised as the maximum safe daily intake of 10mg/ml.
The inquest was headed by coroner Patrick Murphy, the son of an Irish
father who served in the Jamaican police force. The young Murphy became
a lawyer in Britain before he returned to Jamaica to become a magistrate
in 1990. Now he was the coroner in a high-profile inquiry where his
deliberate methods were to become features of the case. Murphy recorded
each testimony in long-hand despite the presence of two stenographers, and
repeatedly told witnesses they were speaking too fast.
He was joined in his deliberations by 11 local people, the jury which
Jamaican law necessitates for inquests. Together they had to decide what
happened to Bob Woolmer in room 374 of the Pegasus Hotel in the early
hours of March 18. By this time Shields, one of 57 witnesses to give
evidence, had no doubt that Woolmer had died of natural causes. He said
so with complete conviction during his six days of evidence to the inquest.
Woolmer's body had been found slumped against the bathroom door with
his back against it: impossible for anyone to have strangled him then got
out. The jury also heard John Slaughter of the Forensic Science Service in
London testify that he found no cypermethrin in a blood sample taken from
Woolmer. And they heard Professor Tara Dasgupta of the University of West
Indies Pesticide Research Unit, who conducted an independent test, confirm
that there were no traces of any poison in his findings.
The alternative view came from Kent Pantry, Jamaica's Director of Public
Prosecutions, who attacked the international pathologists, Slaughter, Shields and others who believed that Woolmer had died from natural causes. He
was one man who remained convinced it was murder. But then, you might
say, he would. A lot of convicted prisoners in Jamaica would start appealing
against their sentences if the chief pathologist was exposed as unreliable.
At the end Murphy told the jury that they could return several possible
verdicts, including murder, manslaughter, death by natural causes, unlawful
killing, suicide, accident or misadventure. They chose none of them. Instead,
after hours of deliberation, they returned an open verdict, the foreman of
the jury later telling the local Gleaner newspaper that there were far too
many inconsistencies to say definitely whether Woolmer was murdered or
died from natural causes.
It was, in many ways, the worst possible verdict. Because it means we
just do not know. After eight months of drama, intense scrutiny and pain,
the question remained of whether Bob Woolmer had his life taken from him
or simply succumbed naturally to the stresses inherent in his very demanding
job.
At least Gill Woolmer and her two sons have found some sort of peace.
Shortly after Christmas, speaking from Cape Town, she said: "Having studied
all the evidence available to us, my boys and I are completely satisfied that
Bob died of natural causes. I am not surprised that the inquest returned an
open verdict because of the earlier uncertainty, but Mark Shields and the
Jamaican police have been fantastic and have done everything for us they
possibly could."
Paul Newman is cricket correspondent of the Daily Mail