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November
23
India's 3-3 scoreline v WI
raises eyebrows
NEW DELHI: Cricket's anti-corruption investigators must
surely know, but the best indication how a series will
pan out comes strangely from bookmakers.
Many in India's illegal, but thriving gambling industry
had predicted even before the first ball was bowled that
the one-day series between India and the West Indies
will be locked 3-3 going into Sunday's final match.
Which is precisely what happened as hosts India snatched
a series-levelling win in Thursday's sixth match at
Jodhpur to keep the interest alive till the end.
"This series has been a bookmaker's dream,"
said Delhi businessman Rajat Vaid, a self-confessed
punter who bets a rupee on every cricket match played
anywhere in the world. "The market was certain even
before the first one-dayer it would be 3-3 after six
matches. I don't know how they knew, but they
knew."
Former West Indian great, Michael Holding, in his own
understated fashion, added fuel to the growing fire of
speculation by hinting all may not have been above
board. Writing in the Hindustan Times, Holding took a
swipe at the West Indians for being shot out for 201 in
the 47th over at Jodhpur. "It was imperative that
the lower order,
led by Ridley Jacobs, concentrated on occupying the
crease for 50 overs," he wrote. "That could
not have been uppermost in their minds, as Jacobs
certainly would not have taken a single at the beginning
of an over to expose (tailender) Pedro Collins for the
next five deliveries.
"Those three-and-a-half the West Indies missed out
on could have given them another 15-20 runs that could
have made a big difference. But then again, a win for
the WIndies would have meant a 'dead' seventh one-dayer
at Vijayawada," Holding wrote.
Holding, covering the series as a television
commentator, even wondered whether India's stand-in
captain Rahul Dravid had really won the toss in the
crucial tie. "Though the newspapers will record
that India won the toss and, as predicted, elected to
bat second, could someone please let us know who really
won the toss?," Holding wrote at the start of his
column. "It is not a well-known fact, but some
doubts have been raised over the toss," he wrote,
without elaborating. India squeezed out a narrow
three-wicket win in the only low-scoring game of the
series so far despite missing three top players in
captain Sourav Ganguly, Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer
Khan.
Cricketers have been under increasing scrutiny ever
since the match-fixing scandal broke two years ago and
led to life bans on three captains -- Mohammad
Azharuddin of India, and the late Hansie Cronje of South
Africa.
Every dropped catch, run out or a risky stroke is eyed
with suspicion, unfairly putting even the innocent
players in the dock. It may just be the unpredictable
nature of one-day cricket, but the last three series
played on Indian soil over the past 12 months have all
gone down to the wire. India drew with England 3-3 in
January, beat Zimbabwe
3-2 in March and now find themselves locked all square
against the West Indies.
This against a touring side, minus star batsman Brian
Lara, who were thrashed 2-0 in the Test series and given
virtually no chance in the one-dayers. Yet, Carl
Hooper's men led 2-0, India hit back to make it 2-2, the
West Indies again made it 3-2, before India drew level a
second time at Jodhpur. Punter Vaid said his bookmaker
was still
to offer odds on the result at Vijayawada on Sunday.
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