from_the_stands wrote:sportbloggeradi wrote:Since the fixing incident i haven't cared to watch any cricket match. I just cannot believe this has happened yet again after the confession of Hansie Cronje. What are the cricketers playing for and what was i watching all the time![]()
Now on basis of records i can only trust Sachin, Dravid, Ponting and Kallis for not being involved in such murky things. Who knows what other players with bad statistics are up to ?
How do you know that these players haven't been on the take at some point? You couldn't possibly know that for sure unless you where actually one of them, or the bookie they did business with. Ponting's record in India is rubbish, yet he averages over 50 everywhere else. And in a game where every Indian bookmaker didn't want India to win, Sachin makes 4! Whilst I'm not questioning the integrity of 2 of the finest cricketers of the modern era here, what I am suggesting is that everyone has a price tag for their integrity, and some of us value it more so than others. Mohammad Azharuddin (and Hansie Cronje) obviously had a price for his, and is now a standing member in the lower house of the Indian parliament!
In sport, especially where money is involved, ANYTHING is possible.
mikesiva wrote:Borges wrote:> In sport, especially where money is involved, ANYTHING is possible.
Breaking news:Twenty nine cricketers, including two Australians are suspected to be involved in spot-fixing at last year's Indian Premier League in South Africa, a leading London newspaper claimed today.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/29-cricke ... 99172.aspx
Too early to comment on this I suppose; the ICC has neither confirmed nor denied this yet.
And, lest we forget, no Pakistanis were playing in that IPL....
No Englishman either, for that matter.
yuppie wrote:Has anyone actually seen the article in the Sunday Times? I know we can no longer get access to the times unless someone is buying it. Can anyone confirm the English article?
D/L wrote:yuppie wrote:Has anyone actually seen the article in the Sunday Times? I know we can no longer get access to the times unless someone is buying it. Can anyone confirm the English article?
Here you are, yuppie...
- http://www.cricinfo.com/ipl2010/content ... 60389.htmlIPL 1 and 2 we were worried about, not because we think there were huge fixes, but because there was no infrastructure to prevent it. That doesn't mean to say that matches were fixed in IPL 1 and 2, but nor can I, hand on heart, give it a clean bill of health. I just don't know.
It is true that Lord Condon, then chief of the ACSU, addressed the ICC Board on the threat of corruption that existed. At the time the IPL was in the limelight, so he did mention that he had heard accusations of irregularities, but at no stage was any report prepared.

mikesiva wrote:And now, allegedly some players were involved in spot-fixing in last night's ODI, which Pakistan won....
http://www.cricinfo.com/england-v-pakis ... 77641.html
It seems the story is this - the spot-fixing involved the amount of runs scored by the batsmen in two ODIs.
Now, how can the batsmen be certain of scoring a certain amount of runs, unless they were both maiden overs? That would have to involve collusion with the bowler, surely?
Dimi wrote:A lot of the betting on scores for batsmen are things like he will score more than 36.5 runs, so if say a batsman is in great form and everyone's betting that he'll score more than 36.5 runs, then the fixer can collude with the batsman and make sure he gets out for 36 runs or less.

DeltaAlpha wrote:I find it hard to take this story seriously. Surely nobody would be so stupid as to continue with dubious practices while they were actually being investigated for other somewhat similar ones?
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