While watching the Sri Lanka - Bangladesh
match on tuesday, with India's Asia Cup fate hanging in the balance, at a crucial period, when Bangladesh
had 5 wickets in hand and 50 runs to get in plenty of time, one of the batsman
played an uppish shot and it went towards Malinga, who would have had to put in
a quick sprint, and maybe a dive, nothing I haven't seen the man do a countless
number of times. But instead what happened was Malinga barely went for it and
the ball landed around 3-4 feet ahead of him.
At that point of
time, the mind went instantly to fixing, and I started thinking, in such a
situation, where the result of the match is irrelevant to the stronger team,
while being extremely relevant to the progress of the weaker team, where the
bookies would get good odds against Bangladesh, how much money could a
cricketer or more than one cricketer, be offered to under-perform or throw a
game. And would the money be enough to tempt maybe an aging player, or a player
who believes he doesn't have too long left in the game, to take what he can,
and get out. Would a Maharoof, agree to bowl leg-side throughout the game at
the speed of 120-130 kmph, so that Bangladesh could win. Would a batsman agree
to get out under 10, and make some quick money, because it really would not
matter one way or the other so what's the harm in getting paid to chill. He may
justify it to himself by saying, "when it really counts i wouldn't even
think about it". I don't really know, how someone rationalizes something
like that, but i have to believe that there are more factors in play other than
cold hard cash. Would that same logic even apply to a spot fixing scenario, of
no-balls in an over or wides in an over, or even boundaries in an over in an
irrelevant game.
I however, admonished
myself for being that cynical, and eventually convinced myself that maybe
the man is saving his strength and preserving his fitness for the upcoming
ODI's against England, and maybe more importantly the IPL, where he can get the
money match fixing never offered, legitimately, by kicking ass for his club in
the gilli danda format. Which is about the only thing the IPL is good for, as
long as it does not fall prey to it itself, is that it will and maybe to a
certain extent already has, completely dis-incentivized match fixing. With the
kind of prices random ass cricketers are getting in the IPL, it would be
completely daft, to even consider exposing yourself to the risks of match
fixing. If you can perform well, and you do perform well, it will invariably
result in a rise in your bank balance.
In the end Bangladesh beat a listless
Sri-Lanka, but that’s all they were, completely listless. They had just
finished a tough tri-series in Australia, where they played all 3 of their
finals, and eventually ended up on the losing end. They were in Bangladesh in the blink of an
eye, ravaged by injury and demoralised by defeat, and it’s no wonder they lost
all their games. But the recent news of spot-fixing, match-fixing, the
Cairns-Modi saga, Mohammad Amir’s release from jail and subsequent interview,
even the bizarre Nupur Mehta news item, are all bitter reminders that no matter how much you may want to wish it away, match-fixing is the most serious threat to cricket as a sport, and it will rear its ugly head again sooner rather than later.
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