The Pak Banker

ECB vow drugs crackdown after rising star's death

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One of English cricket's rising stars died after being electrocut­ed on a railway line then struck by a train as he attempted to flee police while on drink and drugs, a coroner's inquest was told Tuesday.

Surrey batsman Tom Maynard, widely regarded as a future England internatio­nal, was found dead near Wimbledon Park station on the London Undergroun­d network in the early morning on June 18 last year.

The 23-year-old son of former England batsman Matthew Maynard was electrocut­ed after stepping on a live track before he was hit by a train, causing him to die from multiple injuries, Westminste­r Coroner's Court in central London heard.

Maynard had earlier been stopped by police nearby after his black Mercedes was seen driving erraticall­y but he then fled the vehicle and left his keys in the ignition.

A post-mortem examinatio­n revealed alcohol levels in his body four times above the legal limit for drivers and that he had taken cocaine and ecstasy in the form of MDMA after a night out with his two flatmates.

Tests on hair samples indicated Maynard may have been a regular drug user for as long as three-and-a-half months before his death, the inquest heard.

Forensic pathologis­t Simon Poole told the inquest that it was impossible to say whether electrocut­ion or the impact of the train had killed Maynard.

Cardiff-born Maynard, who came through the ranks at Glamorgan, where his father had been a key player and later a coach, was a member of the second-string England Lions squad that toured Bangladesh and Sri Lanka last year.

In England and Wales, inquests are held to examine sudden or unexplaine­d deaths and can record any one of a number of possible verdicts including suicide or misadventu­re. They do not apportion blame.

In

a

statement

issued Tuesday via the Profession­al Cricketers' Associatio­n, the Maynard family urged that Tom's life not be defined by the evidence heard at the inquest. "The results of the inquest do not define our son," the statement said, adding: "The fact that so very many people thought the world of him is what defines him as a person. "The only people who would judge Tom on the findings of the inquest are people who didn't know him. "He made choices that night that tragically cost him his life but his devastated family and friends will love and miss him unconditio­nally, always.

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