Time to weed out ‘bad’ players from Cricket.
The game of cricket is too good to be spoilt and it is actually time to weed
out some “bad” players from the sport, says Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj
Kumar whose team is aiming to file the charge sheet in the IPL spot-fixing
scandal before he hangs his boots end of next month.
Mr. Kumar, who has been engaged in several high profile
cases in his career spanning over three decades, feels that the spot-fixing
scandal was a murder of faith of millions of cricket lovers.
“After this case surfaced I actually started getting into
the history of this game and came across what Australian captain Bill Woodfull
told English Team Manager Pelham Warner in 1932 when bodyline attack was the order
of the day between the two arch rivals.
“This game is too good to be spoilt. It’s time some people
got out of it,” Mr. Kumar quoted Woodfull and added, “similarly, I echo the
same view that the game is too good to be spoilt and it is actually time to
weed out some bad players from the game."
This game, cricket
was known as “gentleman’s game” but it is no longer the same. The spot-fixing
scandal will remain fresh in the memory of people as they will not be able to
get over the cheating they had to face at the hands of some of the cricketers.
I am afraid that love associated with the game may go
forever as the sweet gestures of players may now be viewed with suspicion by
people.
The stringent Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act
(MCOCA) was duly applied in the case, and I feel that it was a decision taken
rightly after consulting legal experts.
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