Pak Match Fixing Scandal
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Match-fixing scandal: Clinching evidence against Pak players, Lorgat tells NDTV
- Friday September 3, 2010
- Sports News | Anjali Doshi
ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat has said that there is enough clinching evidence to charge the three Pakistani cricketers.
- www.ndtv.com
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Pak match-fixing scandal: ICC provisionally suspends tainted Pak trio
- Friday September 3, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
The International Cricket Council (ICC) has provisionally suspended and charged three tainted Pakistan players under its anti-corruption code in the wake of the match-fixing scandal during the team's tour of England.(Watch: Did Pakistan fix these matches? | Pak players caught on tape)A statement issued by the ICC confirmed that Salman Butt, Mohamma...
- www.ndtv.com
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Dawood's bookie in Pak match-fixing scandal?
- Thursday September 2, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
A report published in the Sydney Morning Herald on Tuesday morning suggested that two Australian cricketers, Shane Watson and Brad Haddin, were approached by an Indian bookie, a suspected Indian gangster with links to illegal bookmakers. This allegedly happened during Australia's tour of England last year and then the T20 World Cup.The newsp...
- www.ndtv.com
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Pak match-fixing scandal: Did 'Mumbai Don' approach Brett Lee too?
- Wednesday September 1, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
After Brad Haddin and Shane Watson, two more Australian cricketers have alleged that they were approached by the match fixer during Australia's tour to England last year. According to a report issued by Cricket Australia, Brett Lee and Mitchell Johnson were also approached by the same Indian gangster who had earlier tried to lure Haddin and Wa...
- www.ndtv.com
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Pak match-fixing scandal: Butt, Asif, Amir to face Pak Cricket Board today
- Wednesday September 1, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
Pakistani captain Salman Butt and fast-pacers Mohammed Asif and Mohammed Amir will face their cricket board's internal inquiry today at the Pakistan High Commission in London. The three players were pulled out of practice in Taunton on Tuesday and asked to report to London to be questioned by Scotland Yard investigators for a second time in connect...
- www.ndtv.com
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Match-fixing scandal: Pakistan Cricket Board won't drop players without proof
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
The substantial charges of corruption against members of the Pakistani cricket team have become a national embarrassment and crisis. Pakistan's Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, is personally supervising an inquiry into allegations that players collaborated actively and frequently with middlemen on details of play - like when to bowl a no-ball - dur...
- www.ndtv.com
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Pak match-fixing scandal: No links to 'fixer' Majeed, says Younis
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
Former captain Younis Khan has sent a legal notice to British tabloid 'News of the World', which claimed in a report that he like several Pakistani cricketers had signed Mazhar and Azhar Majeed as his agents in the United Kingdom.Reliable sources close to Younis told PTI, that Younis instructed his lawyer Ahmed Qayyum to issue the notice to the tab...
- www.ndtv.com
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Pak match-fixing scandal: Indian Don approached Oz players, says report
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
The world of cricket gets murkier. An Australian newspaper has now reported that players Shane Watson and Brad Haddin were approached by a suspected Indian gangster and both reported it to the authorities. A report published in the Sydney Morning Herald on Tuesday morning suggests that the two Australian cricketers, Watson and Haddin, were a...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Former captains react to Pak match-fixing scandal
- Monday August 30, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
Former cricket captains around the world on Monday reacted with shock and anger at the 'spot-fixing' scandal involving Pakistani players and demanded life bans for the guilty to wipe out corruption from the sport.Former captains from England, Australia and Pakistan condemned the situation after Pakistan captain Salman Butt, bowlers Mohammad Aamir a...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Match-fixing scandal: Clinching evidence against Pak players, Lorgat tells NDTV
- Friday September 3, 2010
- Sports News | Anjali Doshi
ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat has said that there is enough clinching evidence to charge the three Pakistani cricketers.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pak match-fixing scandal: ICC provisionally suspends tainted Pak trio
- Friday September 3, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
The International Cricket Council (ICC) has provisionally suspended and charged three tainted Pakistan players under its anti-corruption code in the wake of the match-fixing scandal during the team's tour of England.(Watch: Did Pakistan fix these matches? | Pak players caught on tape)A statement issued by the ICC confirmed that Salman Butt, Mohamma...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Dawood's bookie in Pak match-fixing scandal?
- Thursday September 2, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
A report published in the Sydney Morning Herald on Tuesday morning suggested that two Australian cricketers, Shane Watson and Brad Haddin, were approached by an Indian bookie, a suspected Indian gangster with links to illegal bookmakers. This allegedly happened during Australia's tour of England last year and then the T20 World Cup.The newsp...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pak match-fixing scandal: Did 'Mumbai Don' approach Brett Lee too?
- Wednesday September 1, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
After Brad Haddin and Shane Watson, two more Australian cricketers have alleged that they were approached by the match fixer during Australia's tour to England last year. According to a report issued by Cricket Australia, Brett Lee and Mitchell Johnson were also approached by the same Indian gangster who had earlier tried to lure Haddin and Wa...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pak match-fixing scandal: Butt, Asif, Amir to face Pak Cricket Board today
- Wednesday September 1, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
Pakistani captain Salman Butt and fast-pacers Mohammed Asif and Mohammed Amir will face their cricket board's internal inquiry today at the Pakistan High Commission in London. The three players were pulled out of practice in Taunton on Tuesday and asked to report to London to be questioned by Scotland Yard investigators for a second time in connect...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Match-fixing scandal: Pakistan Cricket Board won't drop players without proof
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
The substantial charges of corruption against members of the Pakistani cricket team have become a national embarrassment and crisis. Pakistan's Interior Minister, Rehman Malik, is personally supervising an inquiry into allegations that players collaborated actively and frequently with middlemen on details of play - like when to bowl a no-ball - dur...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pak match-fixing scandal: No links to 'fixer' Majeed, says Younis
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
Former captain Younis Khan has sent a legal notice to British tabloid 'News of the World', which claimed in a report that he like several Pakistani cricketers had signed Mazhar and Azhar Majeed as his agents in the United Kingdom.Reliable sources close to Younis told PTI, that Younis instructed his lawyer Ahmed Qayyum to issue the notice to the tab...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Pak match-fixing scandal: Indian Don approached Oz players, says report
- Tuesday August 31, 2010
- Sports News | NDTV Correspondent
The world of cricket gets murkier. An Australian newspaper has now reported that players Shane Watson and Brad Haddin were approached by a suspected Indian gangster and both reported it to the authorities. A report published in the Sydney Morning Herald on Tuesday morning suggests that the two Australian cricketers, Watson and Haddin, were a...
- www.ndtv.com
-
Former captains react to Pak match-fixing scandal
- Monday August 30, 2010
- Sports News | Press Trust of India
Former cricket captains around the world on Monday reacted with shock and anger at the 'spot-fixing' scandal involving Pakistani players and demanded life bans for the guilty to wipe out corruption from the sport.Former captains from England, Australia and Pakistan condemned the situation after Pakistan captain Salman Butt, bowlers Mohammad Aamir a...
- www.ndtv.com