Darrell urges ICC to take action against Pakistani players

Darrell urges ICC to take action against Pakistani players
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Summary

Darrell Hair, the former Test umpire, has branded the Pakistan cricket team cheats, frauds and liars and criticised the International Cricket Council, the world governing body, for refusing to act despite apparent evidence that Shoaib Akhtar tampered with the ball during the one-day international between Pakistan and England at the Rose Bowl last Wednesday. Hair, who stood in 78 Tests and 135 one-day internationals, also told Observer Sport he feels vindicated following Pakistan's troubled tour of England, which was overshadowed by the spot fixing scandal when players were accused of deliberately bowling no-balls. Pakistan's Test captain, Salman Butt, and his team-mates Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif were suspended and returned home early. The Australian's career was ruined by his stance in the controversial Oval Test in August 2006 during Pakistan's last tour of England, when a Test match was forfeited for the first time, following accusations that Inzamam ul-Haq's team had tampered with the ball. Hair retired in 2008 because of the fall-out from the incident. The Pakistan players returned home late last week after the most troubled tour in modern cricket history. Ijaz Butt, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, reiterated his refusal to apologize for smearing England players' reputations. Butt said there had been loud and clear talk in bookies' circles that some English players were paid enormous amounts of money to lose [the third one-day international]. He made the allegations after the ICC said they were investigating the third ODI for suspicious scoring patterns by Pakistan. Nadeem Sarwar, the PCB media manager, told the Jang newspaper that there was no question of Butt apologising. When contacted the ICC declined to comment.
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