Two Pakistani spot-fixers lose appeal; Seven courses on racing blacklist; Haye coming out of retirement

Eric Bianchi
November 24, 2011
2 Comments

Amir and ButtTwo Pakistani cricketers accused of spot-fixing have lost court appeals against their convictions. Salman Butt and Mohammad Amir were sentenced this month after the scandal in August 2010 and had hoped to reduce their sentences of two-and-half-years and six months respectively. Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge, commented that the two had “betrayed their team, their country and followers of the game” and that Butt, in particular, was a “malign influence.”

Fixing was first alleged by former Sunday tabloid the News of the World. They had taped conversations saying that the two above, plus bowler Mohammad Asif, would fix the test with England by the bowling of no balls at certain times. A judge found all three guilty and it sent a strong message to those attempting to fix sports fixtures.

Seven tracks have made it onto a Horsemen’s Group Blacklist after failing a number of tests. The tracks affected, all National Hunt, are Newcastle, Folkestone, Leicester, Lingfield Park, Catterick, Hexham and Towcester. The group, representing racing’s five major bodies, set up the Tariff test to work out which courses fulfill the group’s twin aims of sustainable prize money and a balanced race programme. Alan Morecombe, chief executive of the Horsemen’s Group, will advise members not to run horses at the tracks cited until they do more to conform to the new guidelines. It means the tracks need to provide more prize money or face a boycott.

David Haye is edging towards a return to the ring with the other Klitschko in his crosshairs. Negotiations are at an advanced stage for the former Heavyweight champion to face the older brother Vitali in March 2012. The British fighter was disappointing in losing by a majority decision to Wladimir earlier this year, who took his chance to twist the knife, saying: “David Haye walks around with a battered ego. He cannot even hold his head high in his own country, because he embarrassed himself when we fought, and showed that he was a chicken for 12 rounds.”

The fight hinges on a British TV deal with Haye not receiving anything close to the 50-50 deal he got last time out. We will know more once Wladimir’s next fight on December 10 concludes.

If you have any further information related to this story that you would like to share with us privately please click here.

Can't get enough CalvinAyre.com? Follow us on Twitter and Facebook, then you'll never miss out on the latest gaming industry news.

Share
Views and opinions expressed are those of the Author and do not necessarily reflect those of CalvinAyre.com
  • http://calvinayre.com/2012/02/17/sports/cricketer-jailed-for-spot-fixing/ Sports news | Westfield jailed for spot fixing

    [...] Cricketer Mervyn Westfield was told by a judge “only jail will suffice” at a sentencing hearing that saw him sent down for spot fixing.. Westfield stood accused of taking a £6,000 bribe in order to throw a game between Durham and his club Essex back in September 2009. @Cricketer_RDJ tweeted: “Judge says Westfield must go to jail as a deterrent to others” before reporting that he’d been jailed for four months, serving two before being released on licence. [...]

  • http://calvinayre.com/2012/02/21/sports/carl-froch-boxing-gambling-sanctions/ Sports news | Carl Froch rues “throwaway comment”

    [...] sport’s other misdemeanor this past weekend involved British heavyweight’s Dereck Chisora and David Haye dragging the sport through the dirt. Chisora had already slapped opponent Vitali Klitschko round [...]