Eastern Eye (UK)

Pakistan cricket takes fresh guard after oversteppi­ng

RETURN OF HOME TIES AND HARSHER PENALTIES OFFER WAY FORWARD

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WHEN Mohammad Amir bowled a no-ball against England on the opening day of the 2010 Test at Lord’s, no one could have imagined his long stride past the crease would mark the first step in a historic fixing scandal.

Two days later it was revealed that three no-balls – two by Amir, and one by his pace partner Mohammad Asif – had been part of a shady betting deal.

Pakistan’s captain Salman Butt had orchestrat­ed the deliberate noballs in return for money offered by undercover journalist Mazhar Majeed posing as a bookmaker.

The scandal, exposed in the sting by Britain’s now-defunct News of the World tabloid, rocked the cricketing world, and aftershock­s can still be felt a decade on in Pakistan.

Not only did that dark morning at the revered ‘home of cricket’ derail the careers of three players who were banned and jailed, the saga also led to calls for Pakistan to be booted from internatio­nal cricket.

Butt, Amir and Asif were tried in a

London court for offences under the Gambling Act and were jailed in November 2011.

Announcing the judge underscore­d the crime.

“The image and integrity of what was once a game, but is now a business, is damaged in the eyes of all, including the many youngsters who regarded three of you as heroes,” Justice Jeremy Cooke said.

It marked a new low for Pakistan cricket, already reeling from the aftermath of terror attacks in Lahore on the Sri Lankan team a year before, which triggered the suspension of home internatio­nals.

Because he pleaded guilty earlier than his two teammates, and on account of his youth, the 18-year-old Amir received worldwide sympathy.

He was allowed to play internatio­nal cricket again in 2016 and, now 28, has been successful­ly reintegrat­ed into the Pakistan team.

Asif, who received a seven-year ban and a one-year jail term, is now 37 and in the twilight of his career. sentences, the the severity of

Butt, 35, still harbours hopes of an internatio­nal comeback after consistent domestic performanc­es.

As the orchestrat­or of one of the darkest episodes in the cricket-mad country’s history, that seems unlikely, especially with match-fixing still haunting the game.

Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif were banned after a Pakistan Super League spot-fixing case in 2017.

And in April this year, the talented yet maverick Umar Akmal was banned in April for three years for failing to report fixing offers.

The cases have led to calls for the country to criminalis­e fixing, a campaign taken up by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

“We need to make match-fixing a criminal offence… I have talked to the government to ... make a law related to match-fixing,” PCB chairman Ehsan Mani said.

Former Pakistan captain-turnedcomm­entator Ramiz Raja went a step further, recommendi­ng tainted players should not play again for the national team, as Pakistan contemplat­e the return serving his ban.

“We have suffered numerous times from bringing back tainted players, yet we continue to welcome them just because of their talent,” Raja said. “We should avoid being desperate and rather give new talent a chance to prosper.

“Cricket cannot condone such behaviour and fans need to realise that rooting for tainted players is actually harming Pakistan cricket and its image.”

On the field at least, Pakistan have managed to lift the clouds.

They found an astute skipper to replace Butt in Misbah-ul-Haq, who had been contemplat­ing retirement after being left out for infamous England tour.

He led Pakistan to number one in the Test rankings in 2016.

A tentative return of internatio­nal touring sides has followed, culminatin­g in Azhar Ali leading Pakistan in their first Test on home soil in 10 years when Sri Lanka played in Rawalpindi in December.

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 ??  ?? ON THE SPOT: Mohammad Amir; and (inset above) Salman Butt (left) and Mohammad Asif
ON THE SPOT: Mohammad Amir; and (inset above) Salman Butt (left) and Mohammad Asif

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