The ICC banning Shakib Al Hasan for two years — one of them suspended — from all cricket for not reporting advances by an alleged bookie should send shockwaves in the cricketing world.
Here was a marquee player, Bangladesh’s best cricketer and among the world’s top all-rounders, being punished for his interactions with someone suspected to be a bookie.
Shakib’s conduct — he has let his team, country and cricketing community down — is unpardonable because, having played the game for so long, must surely have been aware of ICC’s instructions, to all players, to report approaches by suspicious elements.
READ: Shakib quits MCC world cricket committee following ICC suspension
The transcripts of Shakib’s Whatsapp conversations with the person in question, released by the ICC, are disturbing. Particularly when Shakib writes to the individual that he wanted to meet him in person.
Then, there are deleted messages. We might never know the extent of Shakib’s involvement with the alleged bookie.
Match and spot fixing and extracting information from cricketers are poison to cricket since they make a mockery of the viewers, the teams and those who play the game honestly. The match becomes a farce.
These bookies strike at the very soul of the game, its integrity, corrupting it, eroding its credibility and luring the players to sell themselves.
Many — such as the celebrated former England captain Michael Vaughan — believe ICC’s punishment to Shakib should have been more severe. Did Shakib get away lightly with just a year of effective ban?
READ: Shakib's IPL 2018 anti-corruption matters were handled by ICC: BCCI ACU head
That the exchanges between Shakib and the alleged bookie happened during the IPL, 2018 — the last year of ICC being in charge of the anti-corruption unit in the competition — is worrying.
Is the IPL, which has been ripped open by spot fixing in the past, still being swarmed by those who want to induce the players and destroy the game?
Unlike the past, the cricketers are paid handsomely now and acts of cheating the game are unforgivable. And there are so many emerging leagues in different corners of the world where anti-corruption units are fragile and porous.
Cricket faces its biggest challenge.
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