Birmingham Post

Midland cricketer pleads guilty in ‘spot fixing’ betting case

- Kim Pilling Special Correspond­ent

APROFESSIO­NAL cricketer has pleaded guilty to conspiring to bribe fellow players to spot fix in a Twenty20 match.

Nasir Jamshaid, 33, from Walsall, who has represente­d Pakistan more than 60 times, had been on trial at Manchester Crown Court but changed his plea on Monday.

Two other men, Yousef Anwar, 36, from Slough – described as the ringleader – and Mohammed Ijaz, 34, from Sheffield, had admitted conspiracy to commit bribery before the trial got under way.

All three will be sentenced February.

Prosecutor Andrew Thomas QC said an undercover police officer infiltrate­d the spot-fixing network by posing as a member of a corrupt betting syndicate.

His work led to the uncovering of an attempted fix in the Bangladesh Premier League (BPL) towards the end of 2016 and an actual fix in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) in February 2017.

In both cases, an opening batsman in the Twenty20 tournament­s had agreed to not score runs from the first two balls of an over in return for payment.

Jamshaid was said to be the target of bribery in the Bangladesh “two dot ball” plan.

He then turned perpetrato­r as a go-between who encouraged other players to spot-fix at a PSL fixture between Islamabad United and Peshawar Zalmi in Dubai on February 9.

The authoritie­s were tipped

in

off about the agreement and allowed the game to go ahead as opening batsman Sharjeel Khan purposely scored no runs off the first two balls of the second over.

Mr Thomas told the jury the case arose out of an investigat­ion by the National Crime Agency and that the undercover operative was introduced to Anwar, who was suspected of involvemen­t in bribery and match-fixing in internatio­nal cricket.

Their first meeting was at a hotel in Slough in November 2016 where Anwar said he had six players working for him in the BPL.

Anwar freely admitted being involved in spot-fixing for about ten years, said Mr Thomas, and went on to discuss spot-fix fees with payment split between players and fixers.

At a further meeting at the same hotel, Anwar told the officer the names of his players including Jamshaid and fellow opening batsman Sharjeel Khan, who both played for the Rangpur Riders.

Jamshaid later went on to agree to undertake a two dot ball fix in a match against Dhaka Dynamites, the court heard, but it was called off when the batsman did not give all the pre-arranged signals – which included the use of certain coloured batting grips.

Another match on December 3 against Barisal Bulls was identified but Jamshaid did not play as he was dropped from the team as the BPL season ended.

In January 2017, Anwar met up with the undercover officer and Jamshaid at a restaurant in Birmingham, the court was told, where Khan and a team-mate, Khalid Latif, were lined up for the next fix in the PSL.

Messages were sent between Anwar and Jamshaid immediatel­y before and after the fix took place, which included discussion­s about payment, the court heard.

Players including Khan were challenged by the authoritie­s after the game and statements were taken and mobile phones were seized, Mr Thomas said.

When Latif’s bag was searched, a number of coloured grips – brought from the UK to Dubai by Anwar – were found, the prosecutor added.

Last year Jamshaid was banned from playing cricket for ten years following an investigat­ion by the Pakistan Cricket Board’s anti-corruption unit. Khan and Latif both received five-year bans.

 ??  ?? Nasir Jamshaid, from Walsall
Nasir Jamshaid, from Walsall

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