Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Behind the fake cricket league in Gujarat that broke hearts

- Maulik Pathak letters@hindustant­imes.com

Sanjay Thakor, 30, was good at cricket, but only in the version played with tennis balls. Growing up in Sundhiya village in Gujarat’s Mehsana district, some 90km from state capital Gandhinaga­r, he worked in his farm and played alley cricket in his free time. Till recently, he had never actually seen a real cricket ball.

When the news of a cricket tournament in Molipur, less than 10km away, and streamed live on YouTube, began circulatin­g in May, the cricket enthusiast in him was intrigued. Sanjay and his friend Sukhaji Thakor, 38, who lived nearby, began visiting Molipur to watch the matches. They were enthralled. The games were played under floodlight­s, and each team had their own jerseys.

As they became regulars, the organisers spotted their interest, and asked them to join the teams. There was money to be made as well, ₹ 400 for every match played. By the beginning of June, Sanjay, a spin bowler, was made captain of Chennai Fighters. Sukhaji, a batsman, was made captain of Gandhinaga­r Challenger­s.

Their dream of playing real cricket matches did not last too long. Two days after the two friends were made captains, the Molipur cricket ground was raided by Gujarat police on July 6. Twenty-four people, dressed in their bright cricket dresses, were detained for questionin­g.

For Sanjay, the immediate concern was money. “The organizers had promised to pay us after 10 matches and we had completed only eight,” he said. “Our main concern was about our payment.”

Soon, however, it dawned on the two men that they were part of an elaborate hoax — of staged matches to con punters in Russia, of matches telecast live on the internet complete with fake crowd noises, of organisers making a quick buck from illegal betting.

Four people — Shoyeb Dawda, Saqib Mahamad, Koli Mahamad Abubakar and Sadiq Dawda — have since been arrested, with 20 of the 24 cricketers picked up from the Molipur ground, including the two friends, let off. Except Saqib Mahamad, who hails from Uttar Pradesh, the other three are from Molipur. “I always wanted to play with a tournament ball and it was fun being out here. But we started connecting the dots after we were to get out or instructed how to play,” Sanjay said.

Setting the stage

Molipur is a small Muslim dominated village of about 1,200 households, 3km from Vadnagar, where most are involved in farming.

The ground where the matches were staged was hidden from sight on the outskirts of the village. When HT visited Molipur, the pitch was deserted and overgrown, the floodlight­s dumped in one corner, a stream flowing nearby. In another corner, there is a small shed where organisers were often seen with their computers, streaming the matches live on a YouTube channel. But the players were barred from that area.

It was in this village that the main organiser, Shoyeb Dawda, 25, grew up.

Villagers recalled Dawda as a simple and shy man who worked in a hotel as an attendant till some years ago. The son of a family of farmers that owned a small patch of land, he tried his hand at different profession­s, but was unsuccessf­ul. Many youngsters in the village go to the Middle East for work, and Dawda wanted to do the same.

“Shoyeb got a passport, sold off his three bigahs of land, but his agent could only arrange to send him to Russia instead of the UAE. He returned within three months,” Ismail Dharniya, Molipur village chief, said.

“One fine day, Shoyeb came and told us that he wanted to prepare our children for sports.”

With most unaware of what it would finally be used for, Dawda began looking for a playground, and approached village councils of Visnagar, Khesimpa, and Madrapur.

Dawda also began selecting players, spending two and a half months in the process. Most were farm labourers, electricia­ns, waiters and even a schoolteac­her, and each were promised ₹400 for playing a match.

At the end of May, Dawda settled for an obscure ground in his own village, a little away from where people lived. “The playground was set up on six bigahs of land that belongs to a villager. Shoyeb agreed to pay a rent of ₹20,000 a month,” said Dharniya.

In first week of June, work started to prepare the ground for a T20 cricket tournament. The grass was trimmed and a pitch was prepared. Floodlight­s were put up, speakers were placed on a corner of the field and a person was engaged to work the camera.

From the players he had selected, six teams were carved out — Haryana Warriors, Palanpur Sports Kings, Maharasthr­a Rangers, Chennai Fighters, Chandigarh Challenger­s, Gandhinaga­r Challenger­s. They were given team jerseys but had to share the cricket kit.

The accused used ₹3 lakh, likely to have been sent from overseas, to pay for preparing the ground, get the generator and floodlight­s on rent, and arrange for payment for the first few matches, police said. The first match was played on the afternoon of June 20. Some 10-12 matches were played, police said after questionin­g Dawda and the other accused.

After a few matches, Dawda got in three profession­al cricketers who had played in local leagues for the matches to look more real. These players found it odd when they were asked to lose their wickets, or go slow in making runs, police said.

And informatio­n reached police, which raided the ground during a match on July 7. “The match was being played under floodlight­s and there was a camera recording it when we reached,” said a police officer who was part of the raid. Police detained 24 people present on the grounds and took away the generator, the camera and the speakers. The floodlight­s, too cumbersome to move, were left behind.

Although there were only 24 people on the day of the police raid, villagers said there would be at least 60 present everyday. “Some people fled to their fields and took to hiding in fear that the police might come looking for them as well,” said a Molipur villager, not wanting to be named.

The Russian twist

The matches were streamed on a YouTube channel called Centuryhit­ters T20, and bets were accepted via a Telegram channel, officials aware of the investigat­ion said. The tournament was staged to dupe punters in cities like Tver, Voronezh and Moscow in Russia, investigat­ions have revealed.

“For the audience at whom it was targeted, there was no love for the sport. Nobody knew these players and their names,” said Achal Tyagi, superinten­dent of police, Mehsana. “It was for some gamblers in Russia who would place bets on various events.”

The bets were placed on the teams that would win the match, and on the fours and sixes hit by the players. Gujarat police have identified a man based in Russia and identified as Asif Mohammad as the person had asked Dawda to start the fake league.

A Russian named Efimov could be the man behind the gambling racket, another police officer said.

“Most likely they were running the racket for Efimov, who provided the money,” he said, seeking anonymity.

While not much is not known about Mohammad, he is said to be from Uttar Pradesh and came in contact with Dawda during his visit there, police officials said. He is also said to have introduced Dawda to Saqib Mahamad, also from Uttar Pradesh. Mahamad is one of the four accused in the case. He operated the camera and recorded the matches.

“Shoyeb played profession­al cricket in Russia. He met Asif over there during his visit and he put Shoyeb on the job. Asif promised to pay Shoyeb a few thousand rupees a month for organizing the matches,” police said.

The Gujarat fake cricket tournament could be just the tip of an iceberg. On July 7, Uttar Pradesh police unearthed a similar scam in Meerut called the Punjab Big Bash, and the person behind it was again Asif Mohammad, according to Meerut police.

The wicket that ended the swindle

For over two weeks, the accused seemed to have planned it with surgical precision. On the YouTube channel, the boundary was never shown, and umpires were seen signalling four or six every time the ball went out of the one camera frame, enabling betting.

In June, however, three players from Kheralu village were roped in. Skilled at the game, and unaware this was an elaborate con, the three players began to play seriously. One of them was then given an instructio­n in the middle of the match.

“He was asked to throw his wicket, but he refused. This created a tussle between the Kheralu players and the organizers. The Kheralu guys were expelled from the game. They went back home and spread the word about the game not being played fairly,” said a police officer aware of the matter.

“Police started keeping a watch over the place and soon noticed that matches were being recorded, instructio­ns were being given to players, umpires were taking orders on walkie- talkies,” the police superinten­dent said. “We asked the people involved in the game and everyone had a different story.”

The accused were arrested under Prevention of Gambling Act, sections 120B (conspiracy), and 420 (cheating) of IPC and Informatio­n Technology Act.

“We are trying to find out the amount of money that was bet for these fixed matches. We are also investigat­ing other places in the country where the racket might have spread,” said Tyagi.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The matches were streamed on a YouTube channel called Centuryhit­ters T20.
HT PHOTO The matches were streamed on a YouTube channel called Centuryhit­ters T20.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India