Dear Friends:

This is the lead story  in online Times of India (11 03 2012):


-bhuban



India-Pakistan World Cup semifinal fixed, says bookie in sting
Ashis Ray, TNN | Mar 12, 2012, 12.47AM IST











India had won the World Cup semifinal match in which the number of catches 
dropped by the Pakistan team had become a talking point. (TOI Photo)






LONDON: Cricket again came under a cloud as the Sunday Times, London, carried 
out a sting operation on a Delhi-based bookie who claimed last year's World Cup 
semifinal between India and Pakistan at Mohali was rigged. 

The man, identified as Vicky Seth and described as "one of Delhi's most 
influential bookmakers", made a slew of "revelations" during a drinking session 
with an undercover Sunday Timesreporter, who videotaped the conversation. The 
reporter had in 2010 exposed three Pakistani cricketers, who were later 
convicted, for indulging in "spot-fixing" in the News of the World newspaper. 

India had won the semifinal match in which the number of catches dropped by the 
Pakistan team had become a talking point. However, theInternational Cricket 
Council denied to TOI that it was launching an inquiry into these claims 
although it could not be ruled out that there was an ongoing probe into some of 
the issues raised by the bookie. 

The report quoted Seth as saying a Bollywood actress, who was not named, was 
used by bookies as a honeytrap to tempt county cricketers into corruption. The 
report asserted: "The ICC is aware of the activities of an actress, suspected 
of attempting to subvert players." The ICC declined comment. 

The bookie also claimed that "big money" is to be made in Test matches and the 
Indian Premier League. 

Asked to react, the head of media and communications at the ICC, Colin Gibson, 
said: "We don't comment on ICC's anti-corruption and security unit matters." He 
added the "spokesman" quoted by the UK's Sunday Times was neither him nor any 
of his colleagues. 

Meanwhile, a source at the ICC pointed to the statement issued by Ravi Sawani, 
the ICC anti-corruption and security unit's chief investigator at the time, who 
denied there was anything suspicious about the Indo-Pak game and recorded that 
no investigation was needed or carried out. Sawani was last year credited with 
nailing the three Pakistani cricketers for spot-fixing and has since left ICC. 

Seth is said to have boasted match-fixing "will always carry on in cricket". He 
said, "There is just so much money involved and it's easy to do as long as 
people don't talk". 

Seth claimed "tens of thousands of pounds are on offer to fix matches". He 
reportedly told the paper that English county cricket was a growing market for 
fixing since the matches were low profile and were not being intensely monitored




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