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Don Topley: 'We were given the nod and the wink that if we happened to lose the
Sunday game then we would get an easy declaration on the Monday'
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When the claims of match-fixing first starting emerging in the early
1990s, many in England adopted an approach that this was something
that happened abroad - clearly this was not anything that could blight
the traditional English game.
That complacency was smashed on Sunday, November 14, 1994 when the
Sunday Mirror ran an interview with two former Essex
cricketers, Don Topley and Guy Lovell, in which they claimed that two
matches between Lancashire and Essex three years earlier had been
rigged.
The games had come near the end of the season. Lancashire were
pressing hard for the Sunday League title and needed to win their
final game and hope that Nottinghamshire lost. The offer was that if
Essex lost on the Sunday, then Lancashire would return the favour in
the Championship match which was being played at the same time. At
the time, Essex trailed Warwickshire by 14 points in that competition.
"We were given the nod and the wink that if we happened to lose the
Sunday game then we would get an easy declaration on the Monday,"
Topley said. ""I was told, `you know what you've got to do' and I
deliberately bowled so that Neil Fairbrother could milk my bowling. I
am ashamed of what I did. It has been with me for all those months.
Now I have got to get it off my chest."
Lovell, playing in his only first-class match, said: "It was in the
pavilion around lunchtime on Sunday when coach Keith Fletcher and
secretary Peter Edwards had left the room that Foster came in and
announced: 'We have done a deal. If we lose today we win the three-day
game tomorrow.' I was shocked but didn't protest and the senior
players didn't seem fazed. I was told to keep my mouth shut, not to
tell officials or bet on the result."
After the revelations Essex rounded on Topley, accusing him of being
bitter over his release at the end of the 1994 season. "A strange
cove, not always popular with his team-mates, Topley often gave the
impression that he felt hard done by," wrote Derek Pringle, who had
captained the side in the Sunday League match. "As anonymity's chilly
hand prepared to lead him quietly away, he has made the headlines
again. It is a sorry way to be remembered."
Foster was equally adamant that no such arrangement had been
discussed, and Neil Fairbrother, the Lancashire skipper in the
Championship game, also denied the claims. "This particular match was
interrupted by rain," he said. "The only way I could achieve a win was
by declaration and to set Essex a target giving ourselves the maximum
time to bowl them out."
In the event, Lancashire won the Sunday match but were denied the title as Nottinghamshire, the leaders, also won. Essex went on to win the Championship game, and secured the title three weeks later by 13 points. It is worth noting The Independent's match report of Essex's win over Lancashire, in which Michael Austin said that Lancashire's declaration was a "stunning tactical abberation". It went on: "How Fairbrother, the acting Lancashire captain, could set Essex a mere 270 to win, off what became 67 overs, on a flat pitch with a pop-gun attack at his disposal will remain a mystery."
Despite the claims, there was no full inquiry. Both counties and the
Test and County Cricket Board announced they had investigated the
claims and there was no substance to them. "I can't believe the TCCB
are not looking into the allegations further," Topley said. "I believe
this matter will return to haunt them." He was right.
That might have been that had it not been for various match-fixing
investigations elsewhere. In 1999 in Melbourne, Mark Waugh was asked
if he knew anything about the Essex v Lancashire match. And in 2000,
former England allrounder Chris Lewis made allegations to the ECB
about matches being fixed. Faced with mounting pressure, the board
called for an inquiry to clear things up.
In May 2000, Topley met with ECB officials formally for the first time
to discuss his claims. In the months that followed other vague claims
relating to various domestic matches surfaced, mostly based on rumour
rather than fact. The Metropolitan Police launched an investigation
but in January 2001 said they would not bring charges as the incident
had happened a decade earlier and was almost impossible to prove
either way.
At the end of the month the ECB announced a similar finding but, much
to Topley's anger, refused to release details of their investigations.
"The whole affair smacks of a whitewash," said Topley. "The statement
may have come as a relief to those administrators and players who wish
to see the matter brushed under the carpet, but there are others who,
in the present climate, expect from the establishment a robustness and
transparency to match the public statements of Lord MacLaurin and
others.
"There is a festering sore in English cricket which will not heal
until there is a willingness at the top of the game to speak plainly
and honestly about corruption," he added. "I can only speak of my
direct experience, but rumours abound about many other matches as far
back as the 1970s."

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Geoff Humpage made claims of his own
© Cricinfo
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| But the matter refused to die. In May 2001, Lord Condon, in his report
by the ICC's anti-corruption unit, said: "It has been suggested to me
that the seeds of corruption in cricket were sown in the 1970s when
county and club games in domestic tournaments in England and other
countries were allegedly fixed by teams to secure points and league
positions." He added that the county circuit's culture of cosy
declarations, joke bowling and manufactured results was the
forerunner to a "more insidious and corrosive form of fixing".
Two days later Geoff Humpage, who played three ODIs for England before
retiring to become a policeman, said that there were matches in 1981
which he thought were odd. "In one game we found ourselves up against
a side who are suddenly playing kids in important positions. In the
Sunday game it was a little bit easier than it should have been. Other
people have now said that there are question marks over the two
games."
Almost immediately, the former Kent allrounder John Shepherd came out
and said that he was part of an arrangement to lose a Sunday League
match against Hampshire in 1978. Both captains denied the claim.
And there it all ended. Many rumours, an equal number of denials and
several more who believed there was no smoke without fire. The change
in the format of matches - four-day Championship games and no Sunday
League fixtures sandwiched in the middle - has meant there is far less
need to negotiate over declarations. Few doubt that there was
horsetrading, but the hope is that it is in the domestic game's past
Is there an incident from the past you would like to know more about? E-mail us with your comments and suggestions.
Martin Williamson is managing editor of Cricinfo
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