Madplayer
Senior Test Player
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2012
- Runs
- 28,686
- Post of the Week
- 1
Cheating has always been looked at as a less serious crime when compared to corruption like match fixing or spot fixing.
Should the changing dynamics of the game compell ICC to re-think their stance on this? More and more money is being pumped into the game like never before. This gives financial security to the players thereby reducing their chances of resorting to corruption. However, the competitiveness has increased and players are willing to cheat to win while not caring about so many cameras on the ground. They are willing to take that risk.
Has the time come to treat cheating like ball tampering, pitch tampering etc. with equally harsh or at least comparable punishments as that for corruption? For example 3-5 year bans depending on the seriousness of the crime.
Should the changing dynamics of the game compell ICC to re-think their stance on this? More and more money is being pumped into the game like never before. This gives financial security to the players thereby reducing their chances of resorting to corruption. However, the competitiveness has increased and players are willing to cheat to win while not caring about so many cameras on the ground. They are willing to take that risk.
Has the time come to treat cheating like ball tampering, pitch tampering etc. with equally harsh or at least comparable punishments as that for corruption? For example 3-5 year bans depending on the seriousness of the crime.
Last edited:
you can consider one crime worse than the other in terms of intentions behind them but yoh can also have comparable punishments for both simply because both bring the game into disrepute and also because the current punishments arent really discouraging the crime enough. And no, its not as black and white as comparing a pick pocket with a murderer.
after he got his name cleared from courts 


: ), i predict that this is just the beginning and if such cheating happens again, we will see even lengthier bans handed out by boards.