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International Cricket Council
SportCricket

Cricket bosses slap UAE-based player with 14-year ban for attempted match-fixing

  • Mehar Chhayakar found guilty of seven breaches of sport’s anti-corruption code
  • Chhayakar had attempted to influence aspects of the UAE’s one-day international series in Zimbabwe in 2019

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Alex Marshall (left), the general manager of the ICC’s integrity unit, alongside then CEO David Richardson (centre) and Geoff Allardice, the general manager cricket operations, at a press conference at ICC headquarters in Dubai. Photo: AP
Reuters

Mehar Chhayakar, an Indian cricketer formerly based in the United Arab Emirates, has been banned from all cricket for 14 years for seven breaches of the sport’s anti-corruption code, the International Cricket Council (ICC) said on Wednesday.

Chhayakar was found guilty by an ICC anti-corruption tribunal of attempting to influence aspects of the UAE’s one-day international series in Zimbabwe in 2019 as well as matches in the Global T20 franchise tournament in Canada in the same year.

“We first encountered Mehar Chhayakar through his involvement in organising a corrupt cricket tournament in Ajman, in 2018,” Alex Marshal, the general manager of the ICC’s integrity unit, said.

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“The charges for which he has now received a lengthy ban are further examples of his continuing efforts to corrupt and damage our sport.

“We will be relentless in pursuing and disrupting the people who try to corrupt cricket. With a ban of 14 years, the Tribunal has sent a clear message to anyone intending to corrupt our game.”

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In a communication with the ICC laid out in the tribunal’s decision, Chhayakar said the charges were “false”.

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