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"Saleem Malik offered US$200K..if I bowl wide of the off-stump & the match was a draw" : Shane Warne

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"Saleem Malik offered US$200K..if I bowl wide of the off-stump & the match was a draw" : Shane Warne

From offers of bribes to failed marriages and relationships, spin legend Shane Warne, one of the greats of cricket, shares the highs and lows of his life in and outside the game in his new book, No Spin. Shane Warne, in an exclusive chat with NDTV, touched on various facets of his life. "The book is an intense, personal account of my life. I've been brutally honest in the book. About my personal life, my relationship with my children, cricket family. I've gone in-depth about everything, especially the IPL 2008," Warne said.


Warne, in his book, also talks of the time when former Pakistan batsman Saleem Malik had offered him money (during the Karachi Test in the 1994-95 series).

"Saleem Malik offered me 200,000 US dollars, he said it will be in my room in half-an-hour if I bowl wide of the off-stump and the match was a draw. That's the bottom line of what he asked," Warne told NDTV.

The 49-year-old cricketer also recalled the time when he was offered money by a bookie in Sri Lanka.

"I lost 5000 thousand dollars in a casino and a friend of Mark Waugh said, 'look, here is the 5000' and I said 'no, I'm okay'. But he said, 'no strings attached and no nothing' and that was that," Warne recalled.

Warne went through a rough patch when he got divorced from wife Simone Callahan in 2005. Then he got engaged to Elizabeth Hurley but that also didn't last long.

"It's never easy for the children when their parents break up. But they have been fantastic to both their mother and me. Now, we have got a fantastic relationship and at the end of the day, the ups and downs in our life, make us who we are. I'm very lucky to have a terrific relationship with my children," Warne said.

"I've had only two proper relationships in my life. Married for 10 years to Simone and I was engaged with Elizabeth but unfortunately, the relationship just fizzled out in the end. But we are still great friends now.

"It was nothing that she did wrong or I did wrong. It was one of those things that didn't work out. Her son Damien and my children, all get along and I still keep in touch which is really nice," the former cricketer said.

Warne said that Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara were the best batsmen of his generation and it is difficult to choose between them.

"Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, easily, were the best batsmen of our generation, my time. If I want someone to score a hundred on the final day of the Test series, I would send Lara. But if I want someone to bat for my life day in, day out, I would send Tendulkar, he was a class act," Warne remarked.

Warne, who shares a very close friendship with Tendulkar, recalled the first time he faced him on the field. In fact, that was Warne's first Test match.

"I didn't know half my team. I had to introduce myself to the team. I remember playing the Test match, where Ravi Shastri played beautifully.

"I dropped him caught and bowled on 66 and he went onto make 206 and Sachin, who looked about 12, I think he was 17, went to make a hundred as well. It was my first introduced to India. We won the series comfortably," Warne said.

"It was a great way to start my friendship with Sachin and Ravi and it was great to play against India," Warne quipped.

The 49-year-old bowler also shed some light on when he used to get 3000 dollars in the early days for playing cricket. In order to support himself, he also worked at a pizza shop.

Warne also said how his poor record in Tests in India as compared to other countries does not affect him.

"It's not a regret. I had a shoulder and a finger operation in two of the tours in India which was really disappointing. The Indian side back then with Sachin, Dravid, Ganguly, Laxman and Sehwag. It was very hard over there in India. I gave my best but they were too good," he said.

https://sports.ndtv.com/cricket/sha...ps-and-top-cricketers-in-his-new-book-1929491
 
Pak players are so tight they look at each others faces when they have to pay for a meal..where would Malik get $200k from..
 
Pak players are so tight they look at each others faces when they have to pay for a meal..where would Malik get $200k from..

Think Mr. Warne trying to rake up old stories....to sell a book.
 
May be it was Rs.200k.
$200k seems a bit too much to bowl a wide ball in 1994
 
"Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, easily, were the best batsmen of our generation"

.

"It's not a regret. I had a shoulder and a finger operation in two of the tours in India which was really disappointing. The Indian side back then with Sachin, Dravid, Ganguly, Laxman and Sehwag. It was very hard over there in India. I gave my best but they were too good,"

To be fair to Warne, this Indian batting line up is, arguably, the strongest ever vs spin bowling.
 
Bowling wides to draw a test, pakistan won that test, warne missed out there ;)
 
Well there goes Saleem Malik’s supposed clean chit
 
Well there goes Saleem Malik’s supposed clean chit

Warne and Waugh themselves were fined by their boards for leaking team information to bookies. They got away with it.

Malik has suffered enough and even Rashid Latif the prime accuser against him appealed to the govt to spare him given that everyone else involved was spared and therefore there should be no double standards for Malik
 
It is extraordinary that Warne is using this incident to sell his book now, because there is no proof that he or some of his team-mates did not take the money.

Let's just recap some undisputed facts:

1. Four weeks earlier in Sri Lanka, both Shane Warne and Mark Waugh later admitted that they accepted $5000 each from a bookie called "John" for "weather forecasts and pitch reports" during a minor ODI series.

2. When the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) learned this much later, they held a secret hearing and fined both players $7500, and issued a gagging order so that the offences would never come to light or face serious scrutiny.

3. Shane Warne's fellow spin bowler, the qualified lawyer Tim May, told the team management on 1 October 1994, after Day 4 of the Karachi Test, that Saleem Malik (the captain of Pakistan) had offered him $200,000 to bowl wide of the stumps. At the time Pakistan was 155-3, chasing an improbable 314 to win.

4. The management then asked the rest of the team if they had received any corrupt offers from Malik or anyone else. Warne then admitted that he had received one and was now reporting it.

5. The following day, Pakistan quickly lost the night watchman Akram Raza to fall to 157-4. Shortly afterwards the debutant pace bowler Jo Angel (who was clumsy and mediocre) caught and bowled Saeed Anwar, leaving Pakistan 174-5. Pakistan actually slumped to the verge of defeat, at 258-9, at which point the betting odds on a Pakistan victory became an amazing 500-1.

6. But then something strange happened. Warne had taken 4 wickets by early in the middle session, but suddenly he started to tire and bowl wide of the off-stump.

7. Something else happened that was strange. The Aussie skipper Mark Taylor, in his first Test as skipper, did not bowl Glenn McGrath at all, even when the second new ball was due. And the whistleblower Tim May bowled only 1 more over.

8. Taylor instead bowled the lumbering Angel continuously at Inzamam, and Shane Warne at the Number 11 Mushtaq Ahmed. And Mushy barely had to play a shot, as Warne's deliveries all started outside off-stump and spun away.

9. Pakistan then cruised from 258-9 to 311-9, the verge of victory.

10. The winning runs were strange: Ian Healy missed a simple stumping off Warne which went for 4 byes.

So what do we have here?

1. We know the Pakistan skipper was corrupt.
2. We know that several others of the Pakistan players were convicted by Justice Qayyum of offences related to fixing at that time. Those players were:

Saleem Malik - banned for life.
Mushtaq Ahmed - censured.
Wasim Akram - fined, stripped of captaincy, life ban from captaincy.
Waqar Younis - fined for incomplete cooperation with investigation.
Inzamam-ul -Haq - fined with the observation that "the partial amnesia Inzamam and Akram Raza developed....was distressing. The commission believes that they knew more than they revealed."
Basit Ali - confessed to involvement in a later fix, then retired and Qayyum recommended no further action provided that he stayed away from cricket for the rest of his life.
Saeed Anwar - Rameez Raja testified to Qayyum that "'Saeed Anwar was also being accused of betting and he had also once in 1994-95 during the South African tour regretted before him to be a part of the conspiracy (of match-fixing) though he avoided his direct involvement in direct words." Fined by Qayyum.

In other words, no fewer than 8 of the 11 Pakistan players in this Test were convicted by the Qayyum Inquiry of fixing offences or of covering them up.

Which begs an obvious question.

Were May and Warne the only Aussies who received a corrupt approach? Did they lose a Test they had already got in the bag for corrupt reasons?
 
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Pak players are so tight they look at each others faces when they have to pay for a meal..where would Malik get $200k from..

Its not neccessary that Malik gave 200k himself, a bookie might be giving it and he could just be a messenger, or getting a cut himself
 
What happened cannot be changed. Present day and aspiring cricketers should take a lesson from those dark days and vow to keep the game clean.
 
Tbh this is a feather in the cap for Saleem Malik that he was actually offering bribe to someone so that Pakistan doesn't loose the match. Generally we hear about cricketers accepting money to loose, he was offering money (of course bankrolled by bookies) to win.
 
Tbh this is a feather in the cap for Saleem Malik that he was actually offering bribe to someone so that Pakistan doesn't loose the match. Generally we hear about cricketers accepting money to loose, he was offering money (of course bankrolled by bookies) to win.
Don't get too carried away with that thought!

A few months later Pakistan reached the finals of the ODI Mandela Cup in South Africa, and Saleem Malik was found by the Qayyum Inquiry to have deliberately chosen to field first in both matches to ensure defeat.

Both days he had told the team that he would bat if he won the toss. And both times he fielded. And they collapsed to defeat both times from a winning position.

In the First Final they were only chasing a paltry 215 to win the ODI. And when Malik ran himself out, 101-2 became 178 all out.

In the Second Final on a batting wicket, South Africa scored 266-5, and Pakistan was 109 all out in reply.
 
Don't get too carried away with that thought!

A few months later Pakistan reached the finals of the ODI Mandela Cup in South Africa, and Saleem Malik was found by the Qayyum Inquiry to have deliberately chosen to field first in both matches to ensure defeat.

Both days he had told the team that he would bat if he won the toss. And both times he fielded. And they collapsed to defeat both times from a winning position.

In the First Final they were only chasing a paltry 215 to win the ODI. And when Malik ran himself out, 101-2 became 178 all out.

In the Second Final on a batting wicket, South Africa scored 266-5, and Pakistan was 109 all out in reply.

I was being sarcastic :) ..All these fixers will take such stories with a little bit of pride! Had Smith/Warner been Asians, their country media would have supported them saying they were trying to win.
 
I was being sarcastic :) ..All these fixers will take such stories with a little bit of pride! Had Smith/Warner been Asians, their country media would have supported them saying they were trying to win.

But there is a difference. Trying to win and trying to lose.
Both are immoral but trying to win will be kept on a higher pedestal.
 
It is extraordinary that Warne is using this incident to sell his book now, because there is no proof that he or some of his team-mates did not take the money.

Let's just recap some undisputed facts:

1. Four weeks earlier in Sri Lanka, both Shane Warne and Mark Waugh later admitted that they accepted $5000 each from a bookie called "John" for "weather forecasts and pitch reports" during a minor ODI series.

2. When the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) learned this much later, they held a secret hearing and fined both players $7500, and issued a gagging order so that the offences would never come to light or face serious scrutiny.

3. Shane Warne's fellow spin bowler, the qualified lawyer Tim May, told the team management on 1 October 1994, after Day 4 of the Karachi Test, that Saleem Malik (the captain of Pakistan) had offered him $200,000 to bowl wide of the stumps. At the time Pakistan was 155-3, chasing an improbable 314 to win.

4. The management then asked the rest of the team if they had received any corrupt offers from Malik or anyone else. Warne then admitted that he had received one and was now reporting it.

5. The following day, Pakistan quickly lost the night watchman Akram Raza to fall to 157-4. Shortly afterwards the debutant pace bowler Jo Angel (who was clumsy and mediocre) caught and bowled Saeed Anwar, leaving Pakistan 174-5. Pakistan actually slumped to the verge of defeat, at 258-9, at which point the betting odds on a Pakistan victory became an amazing 500-1.

6. But then something strange happened. Warne had taken 4 wickets by early in the middle session, but suddenly he started to tire and bowl wide of the off-stump.

7. Something else happened that was strange. The Aussie skipper Mark Taylor, in his first Test as skipper, did not bowl Glenn McGrath at all, even when the second new ball was due. And the whistleblower Tim May bowled only 1 more over.

8. Taylor instead bowled the lumbering Angel continuously at Inzamam, and Shane Warne at the Number 11 Mushtaq Ahmed. And Mushy barely had to play a shot, as Warne's deliveries all started outside off-stump and spun away.

9. Pakistan then cruised from 258-9 to 311-9, the verge of victory.

10. The winning runs were strange: Ian Healy missed a simple stumping off Warne which went for 4 byes.

So what do we have here?

1. We know the Pakistan skipper was corrupt.
2. We know that several others of the Pakistan players were convicted by Justice Qayyum of offences related to fixing at that time. Those players were:

Saleem Malik - banned for life.
Mushtaq Ahmed - censured.
Wasim Akram - fined, stripped of captaincy, life ban from captaincy.
Waqar Younis - fined for incomplete cooperation with investigation.
Inzamam-ul -Haq - fined with the observation that "the partial amnesia Inzamam and Akram Raza developed....was distressing. The commission believes that they knew more than they revealed."
Basit Ali - confessed to involvement in a later fix, then retired and Qayyum recommended no further action provided that he stayed away from cricket for the rest of his life.
Saeed Anwar - Rameez Raja testified to Qayyum that "'Saeed Anwar was also being accused of betting and he had also once in 1994-95 during the South African tour regretted before him to be a part of the conspiracy (of match-fixing) though he avoided his direct involvement in direct words." Fined by Qayyum.

In other words, no fewer than 8 of the 11 Pakistan players in this Test were convicted by the Qayyum Inquiry of fixing offences or of covering them up.

Which begs an obvious question.

Were May and Warne the only Aussies who received a corrupt approach? Did they lose a Test they had already got in the bag for corrupt reasons?

Whatever his faults, Salim Malik was at the end of his career and was probably a convenient scapegoat in my opinion. That said, I have no reason to believe the then ACB, blaming the person of colour from a developing nation is de rigueur in Australia, it is to this day, and one has to wonder what would have happened had this gone to court, Waugh/Warne had taken money from bookies. There was clearly an incentive, at the very least, for the ACB to avoid negative publicity, here.

It always amazes me just how smug Warne comes across, not just after the payment from the bookies, but with his role in 'diureticgate'.
 
Salim Malik was crooked through and through but boy did he school ol' Warnie when Australia came to Pakistan. I have seen very few batsmen play Warne like that
 
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