‘Shocked’ Trott says ’spot fixing’ scandal should not tarnish his Lord’s heroics
September 4th, 2010 - 2:33 pm ICT by ANILondon, Sep 4 (ANI): Jonathan Trott, who hit 184 and shared a world record eighth-wicket stand of 332 with Stuart Broad in the Lord’s Test against Pakistan, admits that he is sickened by match fixing allegations.
The Pakistan cricket team is in the midst of a betting scam, where fast bowlers Mohammed Aamir and Mohammed Asif are alleged to have bowled pre-arranged no-balls in the Lord’s Test against England.
A British tabloid named four Pakistani players and three others of being involved in a spot-fixing racket. It alleged that a Pakistani businessman Majeed had paid bribes to the players to bowl no-balls and wides in the series and in the Lords test.
Trott’s elation of scoring a century in Lord’s Test turned to desolation as news of the scandal began to break.
“It was a surreal weekend. Naturally, I was on an amazing high on Saturday night. But I was too tired to celebrate at all - not even a quick glass of champagne,” The Sun quoted Trott, as saying.
“I just went back to my room and watched TV and played on my Xbox. Then, at around 10pm, I started to hear the rumours. So I was ringing around my teammates to find out what they had heard,” he said.
“This was a Test match at the home of cricket, and the whole day was being overshadowed by these allegations and accusations.
“I remember when young Amir had to come out and bat there were boos and jeers from some and a cold shoulder response from others. As for me, I was in turmoil. There were so many emotions going on - mixed emotions,” Trott said.
“I was angry, I was in shock but I was also very sad. Sad for the game of cricket, sad for the England team who had worked so hard for this deserved victory. And, yes, sad for me and Broady after what we’d done,” he said.
Trott said England’s overall achievements should not be sullied by the current scandal - no matter what the outcome of the ongoing investigation.
“The experts were all saying what great bowlers these guys are and how difficult they were to handle. And they were right. So no one should ever decry what we did against them. Even if these allegations are proven, they should not be allowed to tarnish what we did at Lord’s,” he added. (ANI)
- 'Fixing' allegations ruining cricket, says Watson - Sep 02, 2010
- Take appropriate action against players guilty of fixing: Tendulkar - Sep 03, 2010
- Ban 'tainted' Pak players from international cricket for life, says ex-Kiwi skipper Reid - Sep 01, 2010
- Warne calls for life ban on tainted Pak players - Sep 02, 2010
- 'European bookies not involved in Lord's Test spot-fixing scam' - Sep 02, 2010
- Amir's coach, brother claim he is innocent - Sep 01, 2010
- ICC may probe 'suspicious' Sydney Test between Australia-Pakistan - Sep 04, 2010
- Agent held for Pak cricket betting scandal gets bail - Aug 30, 2010
- Pak manager wants betting scam-hit England tour to continue - Aug 30, 2010
- ICC asks PCB asks to 'drop tainted' players for ODI series against England - Aug 31, 2010
- Mentor defends Mohammad Amir over match-fixing allegations - Aug 30, 2010
- Watson blasts ICC anti corruption unit for its inability to act against match-fixers - Sep 01, 2010
- Lord's Test umpires suspected Aamer of bowling deliberate no-ball - Sep 16, 2010
- Asif released from British jail - May 03, 2012
- Pak cricketers at centre of illegal betting allegations are innocent: Hasan - Sep 02, 2010
Tags: aamir, amazing high, bribes, british tabloid, cold shoulder, deserved victory, elation, england team, fast bowlers, glass of champagne, heroics, jeers, lords test, majeed, mixed emotions, mohammed asif, pakistan cricket team, test match, trott, wicket