Showing posts with label Cricket. scam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cricket. scam. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Cricket Humour

"Bomber" Wells, a spin bowler and great character, played for Gloucestershire and Nottinghamshire. He used to bat at No.11 since one couldn't bat any lower. Of him, they used to paraphrase Denis Compton's famous words describing an equally inept runner:

"When he shouts 'YES" for a run, it is merely the basis for further negotiations!"

Incidentally, Compton was no better. John Warr said, of Compton " He was the only person who would call you for a run and wish you luck at the same time."

Anyway, when Wells played for Gloucestershire, he had an equally horrendous runner as the No.10. During a county match, horror of horrors - both got injured.

*Both* opted for runners when it was their turn to bat. Bomber played a ball on the off, called for a run, forgot he had a runner and ran himself. Ditto at the other end. In the melee, someone decided that a second run was on. Now we had *all four* running. Due to the confusion and constant shouts of "YES" "NO", eventually, *all* of them ran to the same end.

Note - at this point in time, the entire ground is rolling on the floor laughing their behinds out. One of the fielders - brave lad - stops laughing for a minute, picks the ball and throws down the wicket at the other end. Umpire Alec Skelding looks very seriously at the four and calmly informs them " One of you buggers is out. I don't know which. *You* decide and inform the bloody scorers!"

(Incident described in "From the Pavilion End" by Harold "Dickie" Bird)


Monday, September 6, 2010

Match-fixing

         - Will it go away?

Match-fixing did not start with Butt and company, nor with Hansie Cronje or very our own, Azzaruddin. The pioneers of this sport within the great game of cricket are the Aussies. Today they look smug and talk about the defect in Pakistanis and “sub-continent” cultures. It does not matter that the loudest of them are professed gamblers, but they are protected by the law of their land. It hardly matters that in our country they will be considered criminals; hence they speak with the innocence of the ignorant – especially in matters of culture! So, in politeness, I will keep away from a culture debate, where Australia is concerned.

Match-fixing has always existed in some form or the other – and I can say with a fair degree of certainty that this will continue in many forms – now that it has been adopted and refined by the “private underground sector” mainly marshaled by the Indians.

To some extent, till India won the Prudential Cup in 1983 nobody bothered about the subcontinent teams at all. In fact even till the nineties, betting and fixing was on a very primitive scale – and very few even turned up to watch the subcontinent teams play. Cricket was the white man’s game; it was supposed to be cultured and gentlemanly. The ungentlemanly part of it was well hidden – thanks to the lack of technology and the media presence. Also the ungentlemanly part was well taken care of within closed doors and silent wrap on the knuckles or by scratching each other’s back – very like the way the Australians have taken discreet care of their own when their players were caught with their pants down or in illegal dealings! Are examples necessary? Well.

One that comes readily to mind is the oft mentioned 3rd test at Headingly between England and Australia in 1981. This was the game when the great Rod Marsh and Dennis Lillee bet money on themselves to lose the match! Lillee later admitted, “While Australia looked like winning the test, he could not resist the 500 to 1 odds for England”. The concerned boards did not take any action, perhaps laughing it off. The players continued to play and everyone continued to respect and admire them. Even today, they are treated like royalty and make a decent pile from the game. Can you imagine this today – especially if subcontinent players are involved?

This was a match where Australia was very well placed to win the match after having given a follow on to England. Needing only 130 runs to win on the final day, Australia were bowled out for 111, though at one stage they were 56 for 1 and seemingly, cruising home. This was only the second time in Test match history that the side following on has come from behind and won the match. If anyone want to check out the scores the link below will take you there:
Similar leniency by Australia in dealing with players who were paid to advice bookmakers helped to encourage match fixing in international cricket. The famous case in point is that of Mark Waugh and Shane Warne having admitted that they advised bookies about the weather and pitch conditions and received money for it. The Australian Cricket Board handled the matter with absolute secrecy and fined the players sometimes in 1995. The case was not made public till the incident was uncovered by the media in December 1998.

Today, the current Aussie players are coming out of the closet to say, “They were also approached by Indian bookies” – but then, they also state that, “they had informed their management about it”, and, I am sure their management will stand by them. Of course they did not say how much they profited from that meeting.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Cricket Scandal

The news of the match-fixing scandal is unfolding with shocking revelations and unbelievable denials, pushing Pakistan players, officials and government deeply into the mire of shame and embarrassment. Even as there are nervous murmurs of discomfort in Sri Lanka and to a lesser extent in India the world of cricket is pretending to wake up suddenly and behaving as if a devil has sprung from the woodwork and bitten them!

The innocent expressions of surprise from everyone at the helm of affairs at various levels in cricket may be taken at its face value. This is not the time to judge anyone by their "holier than thou" statements.  Only the most innocent can be excused in believing that cricket is the sport of gentlemen. Let us also stop pretending that things are going to change after this. If at all, the stakes have only gone higher. A game like cricket that is played and enjoyed by many, also generates tremendous revenue to everyone involved in it however remotely. The scope and magnitude of this revenue can only increase – and as long as there are innovative thinkers, and money (black or white) available – we will only see growth in this.

Tell me what normal one minute activity in a match played over 5 days at 6 hours per day can generate 10,000 to 20,000 pounds (over Rs.7 to 15lakhs) for the player, and 10 million pounds (over Rs.70 crores) to the bookie? That’s what happens when a bowler bowls a “fixed” no-ball or a batsman bats out a “fixed” maiden over. Till someone can think up a better formula, you can be sure this will stay.

Then again, nobody "belled" the cat - and there is a reason. The stakes are so high, the involvement so deep, the crime so trivial that the whistle blower will be the first to be isolated and fixed! Secondly, let us face it - in most countries like England, Australia and other advanced countries, gambling is a perfectly legal activity and also well regulated - to a large extent. Only in our subcontinent, gambling is illegal because we are like ostriches with heads buried in sand and do not want to set our archaic laws right – because it greases the system and keeps everyone happy.

It is no secret that Indian bookies make the biggest killing. Hansie Cronje and our own Azar were sacrificed at the alter of gambling. Can anyone tell me how many bookies spent time in jail? Let someone also hazard a guess how much “black” money the police and other enforcement agencies are making out of each game? This is the “tax” that is paid by the bookies. So, I should guess, in the game of scratching each other’s back, it pays to keep gambling illegal. It also pays to raise an occasional boogie, like the one currently on, to “advertise” the system that exists – and things will eventually simmer down till the next big thing happens!

Take an Indian player, official or someone from the media who wagers a bet on a match (or some aspect of it), while in England. Would it be illegal? I will tend to believe that he is doing a perfectly legal activity - which is considered normal in England. If that is so, would it not be a logical extension that he seeks tips from “someone in the know of things” to make a more informed decision? (Now, if he doesn’t do that, then he should not be an Indian!)

When one gambles, the results are predictable. Every gambler knows, you can't win them all. Where laws are regulated, there is definite restriction on "fixing" or "loading the dice". But, these are gray areas, since you need very definitive evidence to prove this in court - and then again, there has to be a complainant. The person who complain is a person who has been put to a loss because of the "fixing". Unless the loss can be established, there is no law broken! I doubt if Scotland Yard will be able to charge anyone in this case. They only came into the picture in response to a media exposure of this sordid event.

All those making noises in the present instance are those innocent romantics who have no stakes in the matter. At best they have an intention to “clean-up the system” or at worst - a chance to pull others down, so that they can show how holy they are! As far as I am concerned, while I enjoy reading the excitement and buzz created, and people tearing into one other's character and culture, I do not have any tears for the gambler who wagered and lost. I don't think he is also bothered much - because these happy go lucky folks are already onto their next bet!

Still, it must be told that this gambling is much more of a cleaner racket than our State Government lotteries. So, why are we making such a big deal of it?

In my next post I would like to highlight the hypocrisy of "gentleman" of other nations who are talking of the "criminal culture" of Pakistan as a whole - because of a few "upright, young men" who were unfortunate to get "caught" with their hands in the till. Of course, they will deny everything till their hair turns gray - because history tells them – and our system is such that showing honesty or remorse will lead them to being lynched. Remember Hansie Cronje?

The fact is we do not have the honest non compromised men to face this issue squarely and fairly. Red flags were raised repeatedly, many times in the past. Why did they keep their eyes and ears shut? It was their business to clean up their own environment? Now that we have such a large band-wagon braying for blood, does the administration have the spunk to set things right on a whole sale basis? You can bet your last Rupee on that!

My sympathies are with the old romantics, who hoped for a “better” way, not only for cricket but life and values as a whole – we are extinct. This is another generation!

Monday, August 30, 2010

Cricket meets its match

History of fixing the product of a corrupt society

Scyld Berry August 30, 2010

It is only natural that cricketers - or some of them at least - should reflect the society from which they come. And Pakistan is, and has been almost throughout its existence, riddled with corruption.
England supporters - and westerners in general - may tut-tut and disapprove of Pakistan, from its cricketers who have been implicated in match-fixing over more than two decades to its president, Asif Zardari, who chose to flaunt his wealth while the country he is supposed to rule was flooded. But, uncomfortable truth be told, Britain and the United States have complied with the governments of Pakistan in the basic form of corruption which pervades the country and derails society.
The military takes most of the country's wealth, leaving far too little money to fund civilian society: a euphemism for saying the state does not provide its people with schools and hospitals or any real social care.
In his book Pakistan - Eye of the Storm, the former BBC correspondent Owen Bennett-Jones wrote: "Between 1947 and 1959 up to 73 per cent of Pakistan's total government spending was devoted to defense. The average for the period was 60 per cent." And nothing had changed by the last time England toured Pakistan at the end of 2005. The British High Commission then estimated that Pakistan's military - including the notorious Inter-Services Intelligence - took 70 per cent of government spending for itself. No doubt official disapproval has been expressed, in private, but the aid has continued to pour in from Britain and the US without sufficient strings attached.
Anyone growing up in such a country therefore sees the state doing nothing for its people, feels no loyalty to the state in return, and makes what money he can for himself. And it is very difficult for someone in Pakistan, if not quite impossible, to make a decent living by honest means: what money there is does not go where it should but into official pockets.
My first experience of this was on England's 1977-8 tour of Pakistan. The Raj left behind some lovely hotels, Dean's, Flashman's, Faletti's, and they were all run down, apparently unrenovated since Partition. The money the Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation received from government never went into the hotels which it owned.
For cricketers growing up amid corruption, the temptations are increased by Pakistan being the neighbours of India. Indian cricketers are well paid by their board, and lavishly sponsored. Pakistan players have always been poorly paid by their board, and sponsorship has never made good the difference as the country does not have the industry and private-sector economy which India has.
Pakistan's dressing room is unusual. The first language is not English and Muslim prayers are said and Ramadan, as now, observed. It has been hierarchical too. Traditionally the captain has lorded it over his team, like Imran Khan or Inzamam ul-Haq. The junior player has to conform, without allowance for individualism, to keep his place.
Not surprisingly, cricket match-fixing first reared its head in Pakistan. The inquiries by Justice Qayyum, even though the penalties were watered down by Pakistan's government to reduce international embarrassment, and by India's Central Bureau of Investigation, chronicle some of the nefarious activities which spread from 1980.
They were partly driven by human greed as well as the inequality of Pakistan society. But understandable human weakness was at play too. If you were a cricketer who worked part-time for a bank that collapsed, and some of the people whom you had persuaded to open accounts at that bank wanted their money back, and fast, or else your family would suffer: what would most of us do?
As Lord Condon, the first head of the International Cricket Council's Anti Corruption and Security Unit, told us earlier this year in a rare interview: the bad boys know perfectly how to entrap. Down the slippery slope the young cricketer goes, accepting the odd gift, and then money, in return for more and more important information, until he is one of the boys. And he is only following the example of his seniors, if not betters.
Sexual entrapment has been used as well. There is no going back to an honest life if you have taken the money, or if you have been photographed in a compromising position in a Dubai hotel, especially for players from a Muslim country.
And it is not like the good old days of the 1820s when Lord's was not so much the home of cricket as of gambling, and dodgy fellows/lovable rogues propositioned players as they went in and out of the pavilion.
The trail leads from corrupt cricketers through middlemen back to the biggest mafia bosses in south Asia, to men who have cut their teeth - and more than a few throats - in the Bollywood film industry. To men who are No.1 on Wanted Lists. In them cricket has met its match.


Source : The Daily Telegraph, London
What is true above of Pakistan populace in general is surely applicable to Indian politicians as well? - cr
For cricketers growing up amid corruption, the temptations are increased by Pakistan being the neighbours of India. Indian cricketers are well paid by their board, and lavishly sponsored. Pakistan players have always been poorly paid by their board, and sponsorship has never made good the difference as the country does not have the industry and private-sector economy which India has.
Pakistan's dressing room is unusual. The first language is not English and Muslim prayers are said and Ramadan, as now, observed. It has been hierarchical too. Traditionally the captain has lorded it over his team, like Imran Khan or Inzamam ul-Haq. The junior player has to conform, without allowance for individualism, to keep his place.
Not surprisingly, cricket match-fixing first reared its head in Pakistan. The inquiries by Justice Qayyum, even though the penalties were watered down by Pakistan's government to reduce international embarrassment, and by India's Central Bureau of Investigation, chronicle some of the nefarious activities which spread from 1980.
They were partly driven by human greed as well as the inequality of Pakistan society. But understandable human weakness was at play too. If you were a cricketer who worked part-time for a bank that collapsed, and some of the people whom you had persuaded to open accounts at that bank wanted their money back, and fast, or else your family would suffer: what would most of us do?
As Lord Condon, the first head of the International Cricket Council's Anti Corruption and Security Unit, told us earlier this year in a rare interview: the bad boys know perfectly how to entrap. Down the slippery slope the young cricketer goes, accepting the odd gift, and then money, in return for more and more important information, until he is one of the boys. And he is only following the example of his seniors, if not betters.
Sexual entrapment has been used as well. There is no going back to an honest life if you have taken the money, or if you have been photographed in a compromising position in a Dubai hotel. Especially for players from a Muslim country.
And it is not like the good old days of the 1820s when Lord's was not so much the home of cricket as of gambling, and dodgy fellows/lovable rogues propositioned players as they went in and out of the pavilion.
The trail leads from corrupt cricketers through middlemen back to the biggest mafia bosses in south Asia, to men who have cut their teeth - and more than a few throats - in the Bollywood film industry. To men who are No.1 on Wanted Lists. In them cricket has met its match.
The Daily Telegraph, London