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Younis
accused of ball tampering in Old Trafford Test
London,
June 5: Pakistan
captain Waqar Younis has been accused of tampering with the ball on the
final day of the second Test match against England which the visitors
won on Monday in controversial circumstances with four English batsmen
ruled out on no-balls.
British newspapers on Tuesday carried pictures to back their allegation
that Waqar had tampered with the ball. Other pictures showed off-spinner
Saqlain Mushtaq and fast-bowler Wasim Akram clearly overstepping on
balls with which they took at least three wickets between them.
However, Waqar and team manager denied suggestions of foul play in
Pakistan's memorable 108-run victory which enabled the visitors to
square the series at 1-1. England captain Alec Stewart refused to blame
the umpires saying, "They are human beings and they make human
errors."
But the newspapers minced no words in criticising Waqar and called for
his suspension. "Waqar bowled superbly and captained shrewdly, but
he knew what he was doing and he should be suspended," wrote
Christopher Martin-Jenkins in the Times.
"Whether Waqar should remain as captain after being exposed by
television for a gross breach of Law 42 on fair and unfair play is,
sadly, another matter," he said.
While the Times wrote about "at least three no-ball
decisions, that of Andy Caddick, Nick Knight and Dominic Cork", the
Daily Telegraph, in a front page article said the cameras showed
that four players — Michael Vaughan besides the three — were given
out to no-balls.
"The mean eye of the camera exposed several umpiring mistakes,
including at least three England wickets taken from no-balls that went
unspotted in the excitement. "Worse perhaps, viewers of Channel 4's
highlights in the early evening were given the clearest possible
evidence that Waqar gouged the leather out of one side of the ball with
a fingernail to encourage reverse swing shortly before Michael Atherton
was bowled by a late inswinger in the morning session," wrote the Times.
"England did not complain and the referee, Brian Hastings from New
Zealand, has so far taken no action. It is depressing that bowlers still
think they can tamper with the ball despite cameras watching almost
every move they make.
"I have no doubt that Pakistan are not the only culprits but it
will be no less depressing if, in the light of the evidence, this
becomes the latest breach of the Laws to go unpunished by weak
officials," the report continued.
Waqar was given one-match suspension and fined half of his match fee
last year after being found guilty of changing the condition of the ball
in a one-day game in Sri Lanka. Barry Leadbeater, chairman of the First
Class Umpires' Association, said, "it was very disappointing to see
four given out to quite big no-balls.
One thing in the umpires' defence is that in that pressure couldron they
were desperate not to miss something at the batting end. "I do not
want to see the sort of thing that happened this evening happen again in
the world, so if there is a way of picking up no-balls, I would welcome
it."
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