Investigations by The Australian newspaper reveal that alleged match-fixer Majeed was with the pakistan players during the Australia tour and was allowed access to their hotel rooms
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The revelations by a London newspaper concerning the disgraceful conduct of the Pakistani cricket teamu00a0 haveu00a0 caused seismic shocks across the world to Australia.
Investigations by an Australian newspaper have led to the disclosure that Mazhar Majeed,u00a0 the alleged match-fixer at the centre of the Lord's betting scandal, was inu00a0 Sydney with the visiting Pakistan side during last year's controversial Sydney Test.
Remember this four-play? Pakistan wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal looks dejected after dropping Peter Siddle during Day Four of the Sydney Test against Australia at the Sydney Cricket Ground in January. |
Investigations by The Australian newspaper have revealed that Majeed was with the players during the tour and was allowed access to theiru00a0 hotel rooms.
Familiarity
Majeed and his brother Azhar Majeed are said to be closely involved with the Pakistani players and claim to represent Younis Khan, Abdul Razzaq, present captain Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Yousuf, Shahid Afridi. Kamran Akmal, Misbah-ul-Haq and others.
Former Australian captain Richie Benaud said that in his 52 years of being involved in cricket, "nothing hasu00a0 distressed me more" than yesterday's revelations.
SUNDAY MID DAY columnist and former Australian captain Ian Chappell, who has been actively raising money for Pakistan flood relief, said he knew corruption was rife throughout cricket. He slammed the International Cricket Council andu00a0 asked what the game's governing body and its anti-corruption body had been doing.
"In some ways, I am glad it's come out, because it's got to be fixed," he said.
Majeed reportedly boasted to London's News of the World newspaper that he had made more than a million dollars on the Sydney Test.u00a0
"The odds for Pakistan to lose that match for Australia were, I think, 40-1. Weu00a0 let them get up to 150 then everyone lost their wickets."
The pieces have now fallen in place for me because, having covered the match, I have always felt the result of that Sydney Test was fishy.
Pakistani coach Intikhab Alam, who dined with me, some senior Pakistani journalists and friends after the match, also, was at a loss for words in assessing Pakistani's inexplicable performance in the Test.