'India is being targeted unfairly'
Fakir Hassen
The decision to punish ace Indian batsman
Sachin Tendulkar and five of his teammates has caused a stir in cricketing
circles in South Africa with some saying India is being unfairly singled
out.
Tendulkar, who has so far had a spotless image in world cricket, has
received a sentence of a one-match Test suspension from match referee Mike
Denness for tampering with the ball during the second Test against South
Africa on Sunday. He was also fined 75 per cent of his match fee.
Indian captain Sourav Ganguly also received a one-Test and two one-day
international matches suspension as well as a 75 per cent match fee
forfeiture for his failure to control his team's behaviour.
Harbhajan Singh, Shiv Sunder Das and Deep Dasgupta received the same
sentence as Tendulkar while Virender Sehwag, according to sources, may
have
to miss the third and final Test against South Africa that starts Friday
in Centurion, after receiving a one-match ban for his excessive appealing.
The decision has evoked anger in cricket circles in South Africa.
Although Denness was due to release his findings only later Tuesday, they
have been widely reported in the media, who all quote unnamed but
"reliable"
sources.
Television cameras show Tendulkar was rubbing the ball along the seam, but
"you can clearly see Sachin was just trying to get rid of the mud in the
main seam," said former South African pace bowler Brett Schultz.
"Only if he was tampering with the cross seam would his action have been
suspect."
Joseph Hoover, an angry journalist from Deccan Times , said India is being
unjustly singled out worldwide as a target.
"In the past few years, players from South Africa, England and especially
Australia have been getting away with murder, while Indian players are
being
thoroughly punished for similar actions," Hoover told the Afrikaans daily
Beeld .
He said South African captain Shaun Pollock appealed just as aggressively.
"He practically does a war dance to get the desired reaction from the
umpires.
"Similarly, Jacques Kallis is not shy to launch verbal attacks on the
Indian
batsmen. So how does this differ from the over-enthusiasm of the Indians?"
Singh, Das, Dasgupta and Sehwag appeared before Mike Denness for excessive
appealing and intimidating the umpires, Ian Howell and Russell Tiffin.
Initially, only Tendulkar was called to a hearing after television cameras
caught him trying to lift the seam of the ball with his thumb. But the
five
other members were also summoned to a second hearing Monday night.
Local television production company 'Trademark Television', meanwhile,
denied
allegations that it had drawn the attention of the match referee to
alleged
ball tampering by Tendulkar.
Mike Domaine, a director of the company, denied reports in the Indian
media
that they had alerted Denness to Tendulkar's alleged transgression before
he
saw the pictures himself.
"We are not here to do the match referee's job for him, and to accuse us
of
trying to make mischief by alerting him to the pictures is just
ridiculous,"
Domaine told the daily Business Day .
"He (Denness) and the third umpire, Rudi Koertzen, are sitting in an
office
on their own, with their own monitor. They had seen the incident
themselves,
on their own monitor, and called for the videotape. On the basis of what
they saw on that tape, Denness felt further action was appropriate and
called Tendulkar in.
"Our agreement with the International Cricket Council (ICC) extends purely
to supplying pictures of questionable incidents provided the match referee
asks for them. We don't initiate these procedures because that could be
construed as interference."
United Cricket Board of South Africa CEO Gerald Majola tried to
get
the results of the hearings from Denness after the first hearing Monday,
but
Denness said a second hearing would take place that evening and he
(Denness)
was still in contact with the ICC to clarify some issues.
Official findings are expected to be released later Tuesday.
Indo-Asian News Service
Also read: Mike Denness, put up or shut up!
India's tour of South Africa : Complete coverage
--Indo-Asian News Service
Mail Cricket Editor