Bob Woolmer and International Cricket, may you both rest in peace

Posted at 3:37pm on Friday, March 23rd, 2007

So. Bob Woolmer’s death was murder, not natural causes. The rumours are going that Pakistan threw their first match against the West Indies as part of a betting fix and that Woolmer was killed in case he blew the whistle.

Here was a man whose love of cricket was apparently boundless, whose record as a player was exemplary and as a coach revolutionary. To end his career coaching a side riddled with politics was bad enough. To end it managing a team that appears to have chosen to fail for financial gain even worse; a side that often had little respect for either him or the game and whose worst excesses were often tacitly supported.

He is quoted as having found managing Pakistan trying - saying after the fiasco at the Oval in 2006 that he was “just trying to get [him]self in a place where [he] can enjoy [his] cricket“. What wasn’t as apparent then as it seems to be now was that match fixing was dogging his career again (he was the coach of South Africa during the infamous Hanse Cronje match fixing scandal).

Pakistan’s 1999 World Cup campaign was dogged with match fixing allegations, during which the current Pakistani captain Inzamam-ul Haq was fined for not assisting the enquiry. Since Woolmer took over as coach in 2004 Pakistan had remained relatively free from allegations of player corruption, but during his tenure Woolmer himself had made proposals to the PCB for ways to resolve match fixing within the side.

To coach a side that chooses to fail must have been unbearable for a man like Woolmer. To die at the hands of those that had made his life so unbearable for the last few years is hideous.

Where to now? How does international cricket cope with these events? ICC Chairman Malcolm Speed has said that the World Cup will continue, despite calls for it to be cancelled. He has to, of course. To cancel the sport’s major event would cause financial chaos; cricket worldwide is funded by TV revenue which isn’t going to be received if the games aren’t played.

But what of Pakistan? Do we turn our backs on them as a cricketing nation? I personally am going to find it hard to enjoy watching matches in which they are taking part for a long time…

Inzamam dedicated their victory over Zimbabwe to the memory of Bob Woolmer. Perhaps your boys could have chosen to win a few more, Inzy? Then maybe just maybe all this shit wouldn’t have happened.

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