BLONGERS MUST WALK
This infraction resulted in exemplary punishment. The ICC must now crush the recrudescent scandals that deface cricket.
By Qaiser
Mohammad Ali, Outlook magazine, April 9, 2018
The entire
saga of tampering of the cricket ball by Australian player Cameron Bancroft in
Cape Town, the subsequent discovery—and admission by the culprits—of a
conspiracy led by captain Steve Smith, Cricket Australia’s enquiry and the
punishment meted out, has dealt a grievous blow to the so-called ‘gentleman’s
game’. Is cricket today the most corruption-ridden and the most cheating-prone of all major
international sports? As scandal after scandal unfolds, the fan is left
wondering about the vaunted sense of ‘fair play’, ‘sporting spirit’ and
gentlemanly propriety. The very concept of sport as a means of entertainment
has been overtaken by a grim ‘win-at-all-costs’ syndrome and the greed for
money.
Although
there have been innumerable cases of cheating in sport for centuries around the
globe, any misdemeanour on or off the cricket field particularly hogs global
headlines, as it has historically been hailed as the game that the good guys
play. So, Bancroft rubbing an illegal foreign object on the ball, to get the
advantage of reverse swing for his bowling side during the third Test against
South Africa, was a monumental disgrace, even if he did it on instructions from
the team’s ‘leadership group’.
So blatant
was the cheating that Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull termed it a
“terrible disgrace”. He called upon Cricket Australia (CA) to act “decisively
and emphatically” and punish the guilty. CA promptly launched an inquiry,
following which it banned captain Steve Smith and vice-captain David Warner
for a year each and Bancroft for nine months from all international and
domestic cricket. Later, coach Darren Lehmann stated that he would quit after
the fourth Test against South Africa slated to start on March 30. Warner will
never be considered for leadership roles. BCCI has banned Smith and Warner from
captaining and representing Rajasthan Royals and SunRisers Hyderabad
respectively. Additionally, ICC has fined Smith and Bancroft, though that was
like just a slap on the wrist.
Over the
years and decades, there have been many instances of cheating in cricket. At
times, they give the impression that the game has perpetually been a cosy club
of conmen. In the last ten years particularly, there has been a spate of cases
involving ball tampering, spot/match-fixing, pitch-fixing, batsmen getting out
deliberately, players passing information to bookies and poor on-field
behaviour. A few of those caught in corruption have been penalised with bans,
but some cricketers seem incorrigible and continue to indulge in illegal
practices, wilfully flouting rules.
Mukul
Mudgal, a retired Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, who
probed the 2013 IPL betting-fixing scandal, is categorical in his assessment.
“For a long time, cricket has not been a ‘gentleman’s game’. For that matter,
no competitive sport can be a gentleman’s game. Yes, the standard of fair play
differ from game to game, but that tag is a thing of the past. There are very
high stakes involved now,” Mudgal tells Outlook.
All major
sports in the world have had their low points. Athletes have been indulging
in malpractices for ages in different sports events, including the Olympic
Games. In the US, Major League Baseball (MLB) was rocked in 2013 when many
players were caught using human growth hormone from the Biogenesis of America
clinic. MLB got cracking and punished 14 players—the most number of
suspensions it has ever handed at one go.
Basketball,
another extremely popular sport in America, also has had its share of scandals.
In March last year, New York Knicks’ Joakim Noah was suspended for 20 games
after he tested positive for ligandrol, a banned substance. In 2016, O.J. Mayo
of Milwaukee Bucks was banned for violating the NBA’s anti-doping programme.
These are not isolated cases; NBA’s history, dating back to the early 1950s, is
replete with bans and suspensions of players for various transgressions.
But the biggest
corruption case in sports in recent history was the FIFA bribery and money
laundering scandal in 2015. It is believed that at least $150 million changed
hands between FIFA officials and outsiders. The bribery attempt also hit the
bidding process of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, besides FIFA’s media and
marketing rights. Several top officials were arrested by the US police and
investigation authorities, while some others chose to surrender. Among those
impacted was Sepp Blatter, who was removed as FIFA president after a
17-year-long stint.
Since the
scandal, a drastic cleansing drive was initiated at FIFA. Amongst the measures
taken was the appointment of Mudgal as chairman of the FIFA Governance
Committee. “FIFA has taken several steps to improve its functioning and make it
transparent. I can give one example. The 2026 World Cups bids are now being
assessed and all the criteria are on the FIFA website. There are two sets of
bids: one is a joint bid by Canada, Mexico and the US, while the other bidder
is Morocco. The way they are going to be judged is in the open and there’s a
committee that will assess them,” he says.
However, no
single governing body has been able to rein in corruption and illegal
activities in cricket. In the Indian sub-continent and Australia (and less so
in England), cricket is the biggest money-spinner, and the scale of malpractice
in the sport is also massive. The list of offences is endless even if one looks
at the game’s recent history. In 2010, some Pakistani players accepted money to
bowl no balls in a Test in England; in 2012, an Indian TV channel allegedly
induced some second string Indian players with monetary offers to play below
par; in 2013, the IPL betting-fixing scandal exploded in the open. In between,
there have been several cases of ball tampering. Amongst those charged were
Sachin Tendulkar (vs South Africa, 2001), Rahul Dravid (vs Zimbabwe, 2004),
Shahid Afridi (vs Australia, 2010), and Faf du Plessis (vs Australia, 2016), to
name a few big names.
Many
experts, including Mudgal, feel that the ever-growing stakes in cricket are
responsible for the breaches that tarnish the reputation of the glorious game
with unfailing regularity. Former India all-rounder Madan Lal can’t
understand the greed of current cricketers. “Commercialisation is only
one of the reasons for the mess. If you deeply think about the issue,
corruption should ideally be less because players are now getting more money,
which should satisfy them; so, teams should be clean,” says Madan Lal, a member
of the 1983 World Cup-winning team.
Former India
hockey captain and Dhyan Chand’s son Ashok Kumar points to Kerry Packer’s World
Series Cricket (WSC), launched in 1977-78 in Australia, as the turning point of
commercialisation. Denied TV rights for Australian cricket, the media moghul
hired the world’s top players and threw money at them to play for him. Since
then the lot of cricketers has only grown healthier in terms of improved
remuneration. The hike in their payment structure coincided with a rapid rise
in sponsorship money. Ashok Kumar says that players were ‘managed’ as far back
as 1970s in the Calcutta Hockey League, in which he represented Mohun Bagan,
but that seems like innocent days compared to match-fixing in cricket today. “I
played the league in 1969 and received Rs 3,000 for the season. I came to know
there that players were ‘managed’, but I am not sure if they were ‘managed’
with offers of money or by some other kind of inducements. Secretaries of the
clubs would do that, and inform us that so and so have been ‘managed’. But,
overall, hockey has been clean—rather, I would say, too clean,” Ashok Kumar
tells Outlook.
Former India
football captain Subimal ‘Chuni’ Goswami, who also captained Bengal in the
Ranji Trophy, also squarely blames excess money in cricket for the
malpractices. “Cricket is no more an amateur game, and players are now
professionals. Everyone is trying to impress all in order to earn more money
because the sport is now fetching unimaginable amounts of money, especially T20
cricket. So, I am not surprised at what is happening in cricket,” says
Calcutta-based Goswami.
Many people
feel imposing monetary fines on players would not serve the purpose, simply
because it doesn’t pinch them. Slapping bans is a better way to teach them a
lesson, as that would damage their reputation. For INStance, Warner lost a
personal sponsor even before CA pronounced the one-year ban on him. Home
appliance giant LG confirmed that it would discontinue its long-term
sponsorship of Warner in the light of the ball-tampering scandal.
Disturbingly,
the Cape Town controversy has raised the question if cricket is fast becoming
one of the most notorious sports, thanks to the convulsions that keep rocking
it regularly. Mudgal takes a pragmatic view. “We have to have rules about
sledging etc. in the code of the conduct. But to make cricketers choirboys is
also stupid. The bid to turn them into paragons of virtues is not going to
happen. Cricket is a very professional game, highly competitive,” he says.
Mudgal says
the measures suggested in his committee’s report on the 2013 IPL betting-fixing
scandal and those suggested by the Lodha Committee could be a first step to
check malpractices. But more than anything else, a vigilant and stern ICC is of
paramount importance. After the kid-glove treatment it meted out to the
culprits in the Australian squad in the present ball tampering
controversy—when that country’s cricket board has handed out exemplary
punishment—it does seem the ICC is of a mind to take stern action. The
governing body has finally said it would review ball-tampering and code of
conduct rules.
(This story first appeared in Outlook issue of April
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