Former captain Wasim Akram Sunday once again pleaded his
innocence and maintained that his team lost the 1999 World
Cup matches fair and square. "My conscience is absolutely
clear. I have nothing to hide. I have played my cricket to
the best of my ability and with the objective to win every
game," the 35-year-old stalwart said from Lahore.
Wasim and five others cricketers have been summoned for Oct
20 hearing by Justice Karamat Bhindari who is investigating
allegations that Pakistan deliberately threw matches to
India and Bangladesh in the 1999 event.
Majid Khan, former chief executive of the Pakistan Cricket
Board, in his statement Saturday repeated the allegations
and also raised suspicion on the World Cup final which
Pakistan lost by eight wickets. "We lost the World Cup games
to the teams who were better on that day and not because
they were better than us. One-day cricket is circus where
the team playing good on that day emerges winner.
"It's not like Test cricket when well-prepared teams can
bounce back and make amends for first innings failures. You
play bad on that day and you lose, its as simple as that,"
Wasim, who has a record 440 one-day wickets, said. Wasim
said he hasn't thought about the Oct 20 hearing but
maintained that he would talk to the coach and his fellow
players when he meets them at the camp Monday.
"Unfortunately, it has become a trend that whenever there is
an international season, a controversy is waiting to greet
us. But I am taking this inquiry as an exercise aimed at
settling the issue once and for all." Wasim, commenting on
Majid's statement, said he never understood why the former
captain was against the current players. "Somehow, he has
never liked the current players. He has always tried to find
excuses to slam the players," he said.
Wasim, without going into details because the case was in
the court of law, did argue that against India in Super Six
match at Old Trafford, Pakistan batted second because he
lost the toss. "I don't have to say that Pakistan has a
reputation of being bad chasers and the Indians exploited
it." As regards the final against Australia at Lord's, he
said he had batted first because he had also won the league
game while defending a total.
"Our strength in the competition was bowling and any captain
would chalk out a strategy according to his strength and to
opponents' weaknesses." Commenting on the Bangladesh game at
Northampton, which is considered as the biggest upset of all
time, Wasim blamed the pitch and added that he had opted to
bat second just to let his team have a feel of things while
chasing a target.