
ICC Chief Sharad Pawar (c) had his doubts about the allegations made by a former cricketer known for his headline-grabbing penchant. -Photo by Reuters
NEW DELHI: International Cricket Council (ICC) President Sharad Pawar on Saturday joined the Indian cricket board (BCCI) in dismissing former player Vinod Kambli’s claims of possible corruption in India’s 1996 World Cup semi-final loss to Sri Lanka.
A teary-eyed Kambli recently told a television channel he had doubts about some of the decisions, including opting to bat first, taken in the Kolkata match, which Sri Lanka won by default following crowd trouble at Eden Gardens.
Chasing 252 for victory, India suffered a batting collapse and slumped to 120-8 when a violent crowd stopped the game and Kambli left the ground sobbing.
Pawar had his doubts about the allegations made by a former cricketer known for his headline-grabbing penchant.
“If he is honest and committed cricketer, he should have informed all. Even if he knew something, he kept quiet,” Pawar told Indian media.
“I honestly feel his allegations are an irresponsible statement. I would rather go by what (former India captains) Sourav Ganguly, Sachin Tendulkar or Ajit Wadekar say.
“Had he (Kambli) focussed more on his game, he could have been an asset for the team, just like (contemporary Sachin) Tendulkar,” Pawar added.
Kambli hit two double-centuries and two single ones in his first seven tests before his career stuttered, primarily because of his lack of focus.
BCCI also joined some of Kambli’s former team mates, including then captain Mohammad Azharuddin, in ruling out any wrongdoing in the match.
“I don’t think we need to attach any importance to someone who wakes up 15 years after the incident to make these allegations,” BCCI vice president Rajeev Shukla told reporters.
Sports Minister Ajay Maken, however, called for a probe into the allegations.
“When a player of the team has made a charge, it should be thoroughly investigated,” Maken told reporters.
“It should be properly investigated and if something wrong has happened then the culprits should be punished.”
Former Pakistan captain Salman Butt and pace bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir were jailed this month for taking bribes to fix incidents in last year’s Lord’s test.









Why is Mohammed Azharuddin against a probe? What he is scared of? The 1996 WC semi-final was NOT just another match, and there has not been such accusations against every match as he says.
Why is the Indian govt, and BCCI sheilding him, even as Pakistani cricketers are hounded by their public & media?
This is team decision to field first,its unfair to blame on azharuddin only. lankans play well and they deserve to win this match there is no chance of match fixing.
This charge looks credible given several other bribery charges sorrounding India's former captain Mohammed Azaruddin, all of which have been swept under the carpet.
It's only fair that the charges against him are given the treatment meted out to the Pakistani trio.
This is the problem with Indian and Pakistani cricketers and fans, only the matches they lost were fixed. Pakistanis think quarter final was fixed and Indians say semifinal was fixed.Why nobody says Calcutta 2001 against Australia was fixed, or even corrupt Hansie SA lost in India in the late 90's from position of strengths. How about India win even in this WC? and their strong record in India even at the time they never used to win anything abroad?
Its very simple. One cannot take bribe to commit a win because every player is already committed for that. So you are left with only one option in hand, that is to lose the game intentionally.