August 28 down the years

Cricket in a spot

A Lord's Test comes under the scanner ten years after Cronjegate

The cricket world was hit by yet another fixing scandal when a UK-based tabloid conducted a sting operation  •  Getty Images

The cricket world was hit by yet another fixing scandal when a UK-based tabloid conducted a sting operation  •  Getty Images

2010
Ten years after the first big match-fixing scandal broke, news came that the ongoing Lord's Test was under investigation over spot-fixing allegations. Mazhar Majeed, a Pakistan player agent, had been filmed, in a sting operation by English tabloid News of the World, claiming to have bribed Pakistan's bowlers to bowl no-balls on demand. According to the report, Majeed accepted £150,000 to arrange a fix in which Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif bowled no-balls at specific moments of the match. He also alleged that Pakistan captain Salman Butt and wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal were involved, along with three other unnamed cricketers. The ICC's anti-corruption unit and Scotland Yard began investigations, and in February 2011, Amir, Asif and Butt were handed bans for five, seven and ten years respectively. The sanctions against Asif and Butt had two and five years suspended, which meant none of the three could play official, sanctioned cricket till September 2015. Amir returned to international cricket in 2016 and played his comeback Test at Lord's.
1983
The birth of a human slingshot. Lasith Malinga propelled himself to fame during the 2007 World Cup, where his extraordinary round-arm exocets helped carry Sri Lanka all the way to the final, in Barbados against the eventual champions, Australia. Along the way he proved irresistible at times, not least against South Africa in Guyana, when he grabbed four wickets in consecutive deliveries. Twelve years later, he repeated the feat in a T20I against New Zealand, in which he also became the first bowler to take 100 wickets in the format. He's also the only one to have taken five hat-tricks in international cricket. He was the leader of Sri Lanka's attack in the 2009 and 2012 T20 World Cups, when they reached the final, and captain when they won the title in 2014. For a bowler of his skills, Malinga had a relatively short Test career of 30 matches, preferring to preserve his body for white-ball cricket instead. He was one of the primary innovators in T20 in the format's early years, supplementing his fast, swinging yorker with a well-disguised slower ball, a slower bouncer, and using wide yorkers at the death. You could always rely on him to deliver at the pointy end of a game: most memorably, for Mumbai Indians, he defended nine runs off the final over against Chennai Super Kings in the 2019 IPL final. When he retired in 2021, he was the leading wicket-taker in the IPL.
1992
The Test debut of a bowler who was once controversial and went on to be nothing but successful. Having picked up just the one wicket in the first innings in Colombo, offspinner Muthiah Muralidaran went on to dismiss Tom Moody and Mark Waugh off consecutive balls in the second essay. Australia looked to be all at sea against both Don Anurasiri and Murali, who bowled 34 overs between them in that drawn match. Murali was also no-balled seven times for throwing in a Test in Melbourne in 1995-96, but his action was since cleared by the ICC, leaving him free to do what he did best - bamboozle batters with the extravagant turn he got from his loose-jointed arm. Responsible for about a third of the wickets taken by Sri Lanka, Murali went on to become the most prolific of them all, with a round 800 wickets when he retired from Tests in 2010. He retired from international cricket after appearing in the 2011 World Cup final. Among his many records: 22 ten-fors, including twice in four consecutive Tests.
2005
Another remarkable finale in a remarkable Ashes series. Set 129 to win the fourth Test at Trent Bridge, England slipped to 57 for 4 and 116 for 7 before Ashley Giles and Matthew Hoggard managed to crawl over the finishing line, securing a three-wicket win and a 2-1 series lead. Channel 4, which 13 days earlier had attracted record viewing figures for the final overs of the Old Trafford Test, reported that 8.4 million people, or 45% of the UK TV audience, tuned in for the agonising last rites.
2022
An India-Pakistan match that actually lived up to the hype. Things looked tight for India when they needed 21 off the last two overs on a challenging Dubai pitch in their opening game of the T20 Asia Cup, but Hardik Pandya, who had taken 3 for 25 to restrict Pakistan to 147 earlier in the match, gave them some breathing room with three fours in the 19th over. Left-arm spinner Mohammad Nawaz pulled things back with a wicket and two dots in the final over; Pandya, however, wrapped things up off the fourth ball with a six over long-on to seal a close game by five wickets.
1995
The last day of one of the most amazing County Championship matches of all time. At the very least, Nottinghamshire must have felt safe from defeat when they made 527 in their first innings in Northampton (Tim Robinson 209, Graeme Archer 158) - only for Northamptonshire to reply with a colossal 781 for 7 declared, the highest total in their history and the highest ever against Nottinghamshire. Anil Kumble then took 5 for 43 as Notts made only 157 in their second innings. Their 527 is the highest score by a team losing a first-class match by an innings.
2021
England beat India by an innings and 76 runs at Headingley. India regretted their decision to bat first when England's fast bowlers got them to nick their way to 78 in seam-friendly conditions. The contrast between the two sides was stark when England's openers ended day one unbeaten on 120. After that Joe Root, looking unstoppable with his third hundred of the series, and Dawid Malan, making his comeback after three years, helped extend the lead past 350. India fared better in their second innings - Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli got half-centuries - but lost their last seven wickets for 41 runs. Fast bowler Ollie Robinson, who might not have played if not for the unavailability of six front-line seamers, took 5 for 65.
1913
Birth of Lindsay Hassett, perhaps best remembered as the Australian captain who lost the Ashes after 19 years despite winning the toss in all five Tests. But even in that 1953 series, his last, he demonstrated what a superb little batter he was, hitting hundreds at Lord's. He averaged 46.56 in a Test career that had started in 1938.
1929
On a difficult pitch at Lord's, Kent's stylish England allrounder Frank Woolley "showed all his well-known skill" (said Wisden) in hitting 176 against Middlesex. This made him the sixth man to make 100 first-class hundreds. He finished his career with 145 centuries and scored a total of 58,969 first-class runs, second on the all-time list. He was also one of the greatest fielders of all time, the only non-wicketkeeper to take 1000 catches.
1957
The last hurrah of Denis Compton. Forced to retire by an ongoing knee problem that had dogged him for the best part of a decade, Compton signed off with 143 against Worcestershire at Lord's.
1972
Ravindu Shah, who was born today, burst on to the scene in 1998 with three half-centuries for Kenya in his first ODI series. Given his consistency, style and wristy strokeplay, Shah was soon talked about as a batter of genuine class. He had an impressive 2003 World Cup with two half-centuries in the league stages and contributions of 34 and 46 besides. In the lead-up to the 2007 World Cup he scored his maiden ODI hundred, against Scotland, and followed it with a half-century against New Zealand in the tournament. However, he was unable to completely live up to his promise due to injury and had his opportunities for Kenya curtailed as a result of infighting within the board.
1967
Pakistan were sliding to an innings defeat when Asif Iqbal was joined by Intikhab Alam at The Oval. Together they put on 190 for the ninth wicket, a Test record that lasted until 1997-98. Intikhab's 51 was an ideal foil for Asif's joyful 146 off 244 balls. Pakistan lost the Test and the series, but its final day belonged to them.
1956
Australia finished the match at The Oval and the series on 27 for 5, relieved to cling on for a draw but leaving the Ashes in England. Jim Laker took the last wicket, his 46th in the five matches, a record for a series in England. Nineteen of them were taken in the previous match, the famous fourth Test at Old Trafford.
1924
The birth of Tony MacGibbon, the fast-medium bowler who spearheaded New Zealand's attack from 1950 to 1958. He was also a useful late-order batter and a superb slip fielder. On the 1953-54 tour of South Africa he was crippled by enteritis, but still took 22 Test wickets. His 35 runs in a low-scoring match in Auckland in 1955-56 contributed considerably to New Zealand's maiden Test victory, against West Indies.
1914
In Somerset's second innings in Weston-super-Mare, Yorkshire slow left-armer Alonzo Drake took all ten wickets, in 8.5 overs, finishing with figures of 10 for 35. He bowled unchanged throughout both innings.
1982
Death of a South African who was one of only 13 players to have made a Test debut after the age of 40. Geoff Chubb was that rarity in Test cricket, an opening bowler who played in glasses. When he made his debut, at Trent Bridge in 1951, he joined two other 40-year-olds in the team, Eric Rowan and captain Dudley Nourse. South Africa won by 71 runs. In this, his only Test series, Chubb had innings figures of 5 for 77 at Old Trafford.
Other birthdays
1905 Cyril Walters (England)
1948 Murray Parker (New Zealand)