leg-side-flick
Local Club Regular
- Joined
- May 26, 2015
- Runs
- 1,495
According to Imran Khan, all seam bowlers down the generations have tailored the ball to suit their needs. "I have occasionally scratched the ball and lifted the seam. Only once did I use an object. The ball was not deviating at all, so I got the 12th man to bring on a bottle top and it started to move around a lot." This was during the county encounter between Sussex and Hampshire in 1981, and the methods remained undetected.
When Imran took six for six from 23 deliveries, including a hat-trick, for Sussex against Warwickshire in 1983, umpire voiced his suspicions. Although , who saw the destruction from the non-striker’s end, deemed it the best bowling he had ever seen, others were not that effusive. England seamer Chris Old told the Daily Mirror, "I saw the ball [Imran] had tampered with, and it looked like a dog had chewed it."
According to Oslear, "This was the first time I had seen one side of the ball scratched and torn with pieces of leather ripped out. The quarter seam had been opened up at a point where it meets the stitched seam and it appeared that some of the stitches had been cut. This allowed a triangle of leather to be pulled up from the surface of the ball, it was a piece large enough to be gripped between forefinger and thumb, and by which the ball could be suspended."
A report was sent to Lord’s.
Almost a decade later, Imran’s disciples, Wasim Akram and Waqar, started producing late swing with the old ball. Not too far behind in this particular skill was . When New Zealand visited Pakistan in 1990-91, they were convinced that tampering was taking place. On their return, manager Ian Taylor said, "I’m not sure how they did it — whether they used fingernails or sandpaper. I would not have been surprised if they used knives.
Allan Lamb reported a relaxed exchange between Imran Khan and outside the wine bar at St John’s Wood before the start of the Lord’s Test against West Indies in 1991. Imran asked Smith, the Hampshire captain, how Aaqib was doing. According to Lamb: "Robin said, 'Very well — he is doing a good job for us but has got warned on numerous occasions for tampering with the ball.’ Imran replied, 'Yes, I’ve told him to be more discreet when he does it’"
Aamer Sohail, " "Imran damaged Pakistan cricket by encouraging our bowlers to tamper with the ball. This has led to a culture where we can't produce good new ball bowlers or quality openers."
Mudassar Nazar, now Pakistan national 'B’ coach, declared after the New Zealand tour: "The outlawed practice of roughing up one side of the ball to enhance swing must be eradicated in Pakistan. It’s got to stop."
When Imran took six for six from 23 deliveries, including a hat-trick, for Sussex against Warwickshire in 1983, umpire voiced his suspicions. Although , who saw the destruction from the non-striker’s end, deemed it the best bowling he had ever seen, others were not that effusive. England seamer Chris Old told the Daily Mirror, "I saw the ball [Imran] had tampered with, and it looked like a dog had chewed it."
According to Oslear, "This was the first time I had seen one side of the ball scratched and torn with pieces of leather ripped out. The quarter seam had been opened up at a point where it meets the stitched seam and it appeared that some of the stitches had been cut. This allowed a triangle of leather to be pulled up from the surface of the ball, it was a piece large enough to be gripped between forefinger and thumb, and by which the ball could be suspended."
A report was sent to Lord’s.
Almost a decade later, Imran’s disciples, Wasim Akram and Waqar, started producing late swing with the old ball. Not too far behind in this particular skill was . When New Zealand visited Pakistan in 1990-91, they were convinced that tampering was taking place. On their return, manager Ian Taylor said, "I’m not sure how they did it — whether they used fingernails or sandpaper. I would not have been surprised if they used knives.
Allan Lamb reported a relaxed exchange between Imran Khan and outside the wine bar at St John’s Wood before the start of the Lord’s Test against West Indies in 1991. Imran asked Smith, the Hampshire captain, how Aaqib was doing. According to Lamb: "Robin said, 'Very well — he is doing a good job for us but has got warned on numerous occasions for tampering with the ball.’ Imran replied, 'Yes, I’ve told him to be more discreet when he does it’"
Aamer Sohail, " "Imran damaged Pakistan cricket by encouraging our bowlers to tamper with the ball. This has led to a culture where we can't produce good new ball bowlers or quality openers."
Mudassar Nazar, now Pakistan national 'B’ coach, declared after the New Zealand tour: "The outlawed practice of roughing up one side of the ball to enhance swing must be eradicated in Pakistan. It’s got to stop."
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