ICC TO TAP AUSTRALIA, NZ POLICE TO FIGHT WORLD CUP GRAFT
MELBOURNE, July 30 (Reuters) - The International Cricket Council (ICC) will strike agreements with law enforcement agencies in Australia and New Zealand to guard against corruption blighting the 2015 World Cup, chief executive David Richardson told Reuters on Tuesday.
Elite cricket has been rocked by a series of corruption-related scandals in recent years that have swept up players, umpires and officials around the world.
The 2015 World Cup, to be cohosted by Australia and New Zealand, is likely to generate huge global betting interest, raising fears that players might be targeted by rogue bookmakers with the promise of big pay-offs for cheating. ICC chief Richardson, a former South Africa wicketkeeper who played under disgraced captain Hansie Cronje, the game's most infamous matchfixer, said the global governing body would
Elite cricket has been rocked by a series of corruption-related scandals in recent years that have swept up players, umpires and officials around the world
work more closely with police in the co-host countries than in previous World Cups.
“Previously, we always had anticorruption unit people there observing, educating and just keeping an eye on things,” the 53-year- old told Reuters at the launch of the 2015 World Cup in Melbourne on Tuesday.
“What's different slightly for this event is that we'll be entering into agreements with local police, law enforcement agencies to make sure they can help us in just, basically, building up the intelligence and making sure we can keep track on all the guys around the world who are trying to influence and may try to corrupt players getting involved.“We find that there's these unscrupulous individuals flying around the world betting on cricket, not obviously trying to fix every game but just betting on cricket. “The temptation then is going to be there for them to get players to do what they shouldn't. “That's the real war, making sure that we know who these
people are, making sure that they stay away from the players, making sure that the players report in and protest as soon as they happen rather than being tempted to do anything stupid.”
Richardson's comments come days after a British newspaper re- ported that the ICC's Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU) would probe the recently-concluded one-day series between West Indies and Pakistan. The Mail on Sunday alleged suspicious betting patterns and unusual passages of play.
The report followed revelations of matchfixing in the Bangladesh Premier League, with former Bangladesh captain Mohammad Ashraful confessing to cheating last month, and the arrests of three players in the lucrative Indian Premier League for cheating and fraud.