CRICKET
Silly PointSarfaraz Nawaz's
unsubstantiated claim that Gavaskar was involved in fixing matches finds few takers.
By Abdul
Waheed Khan and Rohit Brijnath
Every man who ever walked a cricket
field in the subcontinent has a story to tell about match-fixing. Who speaks the truth?
Who carries a grudge? Who has the proof? Increasingly it is becoming impossible to tell.
Good men's names are being besmirched, and dishonourable men allowed to go scot-free. The
issue will not die. And if cricket bosses in Pakistan and India believe this disease will
just go away by adopting delaying tactics and without a proper inquiry, several events in
the past one week show they are mistaken.
If the former Pakistan bowler Sarfaraz Nawaz,
"live" on Star Sports, stunned viewers by casually naming Sunil Gavaskar and
Asif Iqbal as responsible for betting and match-fixing (so what if he offered no proof),
former captains Aamer Sohail and Rashid Latif remain relentless in their efforts to prove
to the Pakistan Judicial Commission that what they are saying is true. That match-fixing
is a reality in international cricket.
LIVE
IN LAHORE |
Sarfaraz's bouncers on Star
Sports:
»"I have been saying this from
1980 when things started from India. Asif Iqbal and Gavaskar were openly involved." »"The match
in Bombay where the wicket and outfield were wet ... that pitch was not fit to play. And
many of the Pakistani batsmen complained, they didn't want to bat on a wet wicket. But
Asif and Gavaskar agreed. So what (does) this mean? I mean this inquiry should start from
the beginning."
And Gavaskar's straight drive:
»"I dare say this man's reflection in the mirror will never believe what
he's telling. It's all very well to make allegations against different players without
producing a shred of proof. Pity we have to talk to the scum of the earth on television.
And I don't care if I sound strong but some people need to be talked about in such
language." |
Justice Malik Mohammad Qayyum, head of the Judicial
Commission in Pakistan, has said he's convinced some players were involved in fixing
matches and that he would recommend a life ban on them for selling the honour of their
country. His task may be made easier. For Latif says he has audio-tape recordings of
conversations between some Pakistan players and bookies, and of board officials pleading
with him (Latif) not to play up this issue as it would bring a bad name to Pakistan.
Sohail too has been in touch with the commission, demanding a hearing. He claims that
Pakistan Board Chairman Khalid Mehmood asked him to withdraw all the charges he has made
against Wasim Akram if he wanted to play cricket again. Though Mehmood has strongly denied
this and called Sohail a compulsive liar, Sohail is persisting with his claims, insisting
he can substantiate them. He has now asked the board patron, who is the Pakistani
President, to ask his nominated chairman for an explanation.
Despite this background it was bizarre to hear Sarfaraz say
on television that "Asif and Gavaskar were openly involved in match fixing". The
eccentric fast bowler claimed that during the 1979 Test in Bombay, the "wicket was
wet ... the pitch was not fit to play ... Many of the Pakistani batsmen complained, they
didn't want to bat. But Asif and Gavaskar agreed".
Why Sarfaraz was interviewed live is questionable considering
his reputation -- this is a man who said Imran Khan was a Jewish agent. That Gavaskar
refused to conduct the interview and Ravi Shastri was reluctant should have been warning
enough. More alarming was that minutes prior to the interview, Sarfaraz asked if it would
be recorded and shown. When told it was "live" he seemed surprised and asked
about "liability". The producer replied that he (Sarfaraz) would be responsible
for what he said. It was clear he had something up his sleeve.
It was too late. Expectedly, Gavaskar was livid and called
Sarfaraz the "scum of the earth". Two days later, Gavaskar, a cricketing
monument in this country and untouched by any betting scandal so far, was more composed.
"Looking at his credibility I should have laughed at the matter rather than react the
way I did." He was also buoyed by the response he received after the incident.
"The Pakistan Television crew came and apologised, so did stewards on the Pakistan
International Airlines flight ... it was overwhelming." Asif's response was, "I
don't wish to comment as it will give those statements dignity." Yet he was
surprised, for as he explained Sarfaraz was not even on the 1979-80 tour.
The Mumbai Test of 1979, won by India, was only marginally
touched by controversy. As umpire K.B. Ramaswamy who stood in that match recalls,
"The pitch was covered, but on the third or fourth day, I can't remember which, there
were one or two tiny patches of moisture on the pitch. Asif said the pitch had been
watered and I said no. He then said they would not play. But when we (the umpires) went
out at the scheduled time they followed." Ramaswamy says that he had no conversations
with Gavaskar about the pitch and dismisses talk of fixing as "sheer nonsense".
"If Pakistan had been in a stronger position they would have ignored it."
Confronted with Ramaswamy's statement, Asif agreed.
"Yes, I did protest because when we came to the ground in the morning, I felt the
pitch had been tampered with and rolled to make it easier for batting ( India was
batting). But later on our team continued playing. As it is if I had fixed the Test as
Sarfaraz alleges, why would I have protested on the third day?" Two other members of
that playing XI, Zaheer Abbas and Iqbal Qasim (who took 10 wickets in the match),
supported their ex-captain's assertion, saying nothing fishy had taken place during the
entire game except on the third morning when Pakistan had protested about the pitch.
Yashpal Sharma and Roger Binny, two of the Indians in that team, contend the pitch was
playable. As Sharma says, "In those days we never dreamed of something like this
(fixing). Now they'll say that in 1983 (when India won the World Cup) something must have
happened."
But there is as always a bizarre twist in the tale. Another
member of the Pakistan team alleges that after the series the players realised that a
gentleman who travelled with the team and even stayed on a few occasions with Asif was, in
fact, a bookie. In reply, Asif says he only met Raj Bhagri, the gentlemen in question, on
that tour itself. But he adds, "He was a friend of some of the players and they
introduced him to me. The allegation that he stayed with me and travelled with the team is
false." He also says, "Bhagri was a businessman, I think his father may have
been a bookie." Nevertheless, immediately after the 1979-80 Indian tour, Pakistan
travelled to Sharjah and it was there that Sarfaraz first accused Asif of having links
with an Indian bookmaker (Bhagri presumably) and fixing matches.
This led to unproved stories that Asif had fixed the final
Test in Calcutta in 1980 and conceded the toss to Indian captain Gundappa Vishwanath, who
was never even allowed to look at the coin. Suspicion surrounded Asif's decision to
declare the Pakistan innings at 210 for five when facing India's 262. In his deposition to
the Judicial Commission, Imran mentioned this: "... in India there was some
allegation that there was betting on a Test. Asif had declared the innings at a stage when
Pakistan had not scored more runs than India. There were rumours that it was bet on who
would score more runs in the innings?" Asif denies it vehemently, saying he made the
sudden declaration in Calcutta since his team had a realistic chance of winning the Test
in the available time. "It was a cricketing decision made by the team," he
claims. The match ended in a draw.
Sarfaraz was just repeating what he said 19 years ago, except
he never named Gavaskar then. Why two decades later he has brought up the subject raises
questions about the Pakistani's motives. Indeed, Sarfaraz's old animosity towards both
Gavaskar and Asif, and his reputation for shooting wildly from the lip, clouds the issue.
Gavaskar says he has not spoken to him for over 20 years. "During the 1978 series in
Pakistan he swore at Vishwanath. I said, 'Why are you doing that, he's a good guy' and
then he started swearing at me." Asif and Sarfaraz were not quite buddies either --
Asif, it is said, got the fast bowler dropped from the team for the 1979-80 tour on flimsy
grounds of fitness.
Sarfaraz has never quite cared about finding himself with his
foot in mouth. The more bizarre a statement, more the chances he's behind it. He called
Javed Miandad a chor (thief); he insisted Majid Khan was senile. It has meant the courts
have become his favourite haunt. He was embroiled in legal battles with England batsman
Allan Lamb and Abdul Rehman Bukhatir of Sharjah. Significantly he settled out of court on
both occasions.
Unrepentant, Sarfaraz has added a can of petrol to the fire
he set. Now he says he knows that the notorious Bhagri approached Imran with an offer of
Rs 20 lakh to fix the Lahore Test in the 1982 series in Pakistan and this was done with
the knowledge of the opposing captain, Gavaskar. Imran was not available for comment.
Gavaskar just laughed: "First it was Asif and me, now it's Imran. Let's see who's
next."
It is evident the faster Pakistan wraps up its inquiry and
apportions punishment the better for cricket. The line between truth and fiction is
beginning to blur. If Sarfaraz Nawaz has proof in the form of a tape, a witness, a letter,
he should step forward. Otherwise he should shut up.
And television channels should stop interviewing everyone who
wants 15 minutes of fame. |