Corruption in the IPL
Sreesanth gets life ban for IPL fixing
India and Rajasthan Royals fast bowler Sreesanth
has been handed a life ban by the BCCI for his alleged involvement in
spot-fixing in IPL 2013. His Royals team-mate and Mumbai spinner Ankeet Chavan was also banned for life, following the board's disciplinary committee meeting in Delhi on Friday.
Amit Singh, the Gujarat cricketer-turned-bookie, got a five-year ban, while Saurashtra and Royals seamer Siddharth Trivedi is suspended for a year for not reporting an approach among other things. Twenty-one-year-old Harmeet Singh,
who was part of India's Under-19 World Cup winning team in 2012 and had
a similar charge against him as Trivedi, has been cleared of wrongdoing
due to a lack of evidence against him.
There has been no ruling as yet offspinner Ajit Chandila,
the third Royals player who was arrested in May, since he is yet to be
questioned by Ravi Sawani, who led the BCCI's probe into the matter.
Save for a few days when Chandila was out on bail due to a death in the
family, he has been in police or judicial custody since his arrest on
May 16, meaning Sawani could not speak to him. However, he was granted
bail on September 9, so his case should come up soon. Sreesant and
Chavan were out on bail since June 11.
Sreesanth tweeted soon after the news of his ban broke, saying he found
it "surprising". "Been tracking the news channels... Me getting a life
ban??!! Very surprising," he said. The tweet was deleted soon after.
While Trivedi is banned from playing any BCCI-organised cricket, the
other three are banned from playing any such cricket or in any way being
associated with activities of the Indian board or its affiliates.
The Sawani report had recommended bans ranging from five years to life
for the four players it found guilty on multiple accounts, including
"match-fixing" and "seeking or offering a bribe as a reward for
match-fixing", the Indian Express reported earlier
in the day. The final report adopted a tough tone, saying that none of
the players were naive to the propositions of manipulation.
"There is no specific mitigating factor that would require any mercy
while sanctioning the aforesaid guilty players," Sawani said in the
report. "Sreesanth has played a number of international games and was
part of the Indian national team which won the inaugural T20 World Cup,
2007 and ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011. He has received the ICC ACSU
education programme on many occasions. In any case all the three players
of Rajasthan Royals who are now being accused and found guilty by the
under-signed received the ICC Education Programme just prior to the
beginning of the IPL-6 season i.e. on April 5, 2013. The programme was
delivered to the entire Rajasthan Royals team by Mr Arrie De Bear,
regional security manager of the ICC ACSU.
"Obviously, the anti-corruption education given to the three players had
no impact on the conduct. Therefore, the three players deserve no
leniency whatsoever."
The players, minus Chandila, were summoned by the board to present their case in the disciplinary committee meeting in Delhi.
Sreesanth, Chavan and Chandila were arrested by Delhi Police on May 16
in Mumbai, for the alleged fulfilling of promises made to bookmakers,
along with eleven bookies including Amit Singh. Royals later suspended
their players and the BCCI set up an inquiry into the matter, headed by
its Anti-Corruption and Security Unit chief Sawani. Apart from the
action taken by the board, the players face possible prison sentences
should they be found guilty in a court of law. They were among 39
persons named in the Delhi Police's chargesheet on alleged corruption in
the IPL in July.
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