Jail terms for match-fix cricketers who betrayed their sport for greed

THREE of the world’s top cricketers have been jailed for their part in a match-fixing scam that rocked international sport.

Pakistan’s former Test captain Salman Butt, 27, was jailed for two-and-a-half years for leading a plot to bowl deliberate no-balls in the Lord’s Test against England in summer 2010 in a lucrative betting scam.

The world’s former number two Test bowler, Mohammad Asif, 28, received a 12-month prison term for delivering one of the fraudulent no-balls.

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Mohammad Amir, 19, who had been tipped to become one of the all-time great fast bowlers, was detained for six months in a young offenders institution after he admitted bowling two intentional no-balls at Lord’s.

Mazhar Majeed, 36, the London-based sports agent at the heart of the fixing scandal, was jailed for two years and eight months.

Passing sentence at London’s Southwark Crown Court, Mr Justice Cooke said the four men had damaged the integrity of cricket and betrayed all fans of the sport through their greed. He said they engaged in corruption in a game whose very name used to be associated with “fair dealing on the sporting field”, adding that future matches would forever be tainted by the fixing scandal.

The judge told the four men: “ ‘It’s not cricket’ was an adage. It is the insidious effect of your actions on professional cricket and the followers of it that make the offences so serious.

“The image and integrity of what was once a game but is now a business is damaged in the eyes of all, including the many youngsters who regarded you as heroes and would have given their eye-teeth to play at the levels and with the skills that you had.

“Now, whenever people look back on a surprising event in a game or a surprising result, or whenever in the future there are surprising events or results, followers of the game who have paid good money to watch it live or watch it on television will be left to wonder whether there has been fixing and whether what they have been watching is a genuine contest between bat and ball. What ought to be honest sporting competition may not be such at all.”

The fixing scandal emerged after the News of the World’s former investigations editor, Mazher Mahmood, approached Majeed in August last year pretending to be a wealthy Indian businessman seeking major international cricketers for a tournament. The agent was secretly filmed accepting £150,000 in cash from the journalist as part of an arrangement to rig games.

Majeed promised the reporter that Asif and Amir would deliver three no-balls at specific points during the Test between Pakistan and England at Lord’s from August 26 to 29 last year. He also claimed he had been carrying out match-fixing for two-and-a-half years, had seven players from Pakistan’s national side working for him, and had made “masses and masses of money”.

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Mr Justice Cooke said Majeed and Butt were the “architects” of the scam, procuring the two bowlers to deliver the no-balls at Lord’s. The judge said Butt was the “orchestrator” of the rigging and was responsible for involving the “impressionable” Amir, then aged 18, in the corruption.

Mr Justice Cooke said Amir was “unsophisticated, uneducated and impressionable”, and “readily leant on by others”, but said there was evidence that he discussed rigging an earlier match with a contact in Pakistan.

The four defendants sat impassively in the dock of Southwark’s Court 4, which was packed with journalists and cricket fans, as they learned their fates. They will be released on licence after serving half their terms.

Butt, Asif and Majeed are expected to begin their sentences at Wandsworth prison in London.

Amir is due to be sent to Feltham young offenders institution in west London. His barrister, Henry Blaxland QC, said the young bowler would appeal against his sentence.

Butt’s solicitor, Paul Harris, said the cricketer would be lodging an appeal against sentence.