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Oh what a shame!
Cricket in a fix For this is by no means an isolated episode. The taint of corruption has been hovering over the game for some time. In the mid-1990s Australia was caught up in it. The captain, Mark Taylor, told a Pakistan judicial inquiry convened in 1998 that his team had been offered money to ``bowl badly''. Imran Khan, a former captain of Pakistan, told the inquiry that his knowledge of match-fixing went back nearly two decades. Shane Warne, recently named by Wisden as one of the five great cricketers of this century, reported an offer of money to bowl poorly in the first Test against Pakistan in 1994-95 and so ensure a drawn match. The downfall of Cronje now represents a wider tragedy. His country, not long emerged from the isolation imposed on South Africa because of apartheid, has won back a place among the giants of international cricket. Some predicted that after years outside that forum, South Africa's sport would languish. Both on the cricket and the rugby fields, the opposite has proved to be the case. It has also sorry implications for India and Pakistan, both established international competitors in the cricket field. On the evidence so far available on match-fixing, the accusing fingers points in that direction. However unfairly, seeds of mistrust have been sown... Cricket's ultimate test No one trusts anyone else on the field of play these days anyway and now, thanks to Cronje, the same will apply off it, even within the same team. Little surprise, then if the next generation feels like turning its back on cricket and trying something a little less contrived: professional wrestling, say... Excerpted from a piece entitled `Cricket's ultimate test' by Mike Selvey, `The Guardian, April 15 Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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