Apr 232013
 

April 23 (Reuters) – Disgraced Pakistan trio Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir should stop “misleading the public” and instead help cricket in “the fight against corruption”, International Cricket Council (ICC) chief executive Dave
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Apr 182013
 

Former Pakistan captain Salman Butt and fast bowler Mohammad Asif, who on Wednesday lost their appeal at the Court of Abritration for Sport against spot-fixing bans, were the first players with team-mate Mohammad Aamer to be punished by the
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Apr 172013
 
CAS rejects Butt, Asif ban appeals

Click for detailed story The Court of Arbitration for Sport on Wednesday said that it had rejected appeals against spot-fixing bans filed by disgraced former Pakistan cricket captain Salman Butt and fast bowler Mohammad Asif. The ruling marked the final chapter in one of the biggest cricketing scandals of recent years. “The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has dismissed the appeals filed by the Pakistani cricket …

Feb 072013
 
Return to cricket: Mohammad Asif hopeful CAS will overturn his ban


LAUSANNE: Fast bowler Mohammad Asif is hopeful the Court of Arbitration for Sport will overturn his ban for spot-fixing in one of the biggest cricket scandals in years, he said on Thursday.

“Today was quite busy,” Asif told AFP after the end of a day-long hearing behind closed doors at the CAS’s Swiss headquarters. “They will give us their decision in the next three weeks.”

He added: “Hopefully I am going to win this case. I’d like to play cricket again.”

On Friday, Pakistan captain Salman Butt is due to attend a CAS appeal hearing on his own ban.

Butt, Asif and fellow fast bowler Mohammad Aamer were banned by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for contriving to bowl deliberate no-balls during the Lord’s Test between Pakistan and England in August 2010.

Butt was banned for 10 years, with five suspended, Asif for seven years, with two suspended, and the then teenager Aamer for five years.

The trio were also jailed by a British court over the scandal in November 2011. All three were released last year after completing half of their sentences.

Aamer, now 20, decided not to pursue his appeal at the CAS, after pleading guilty to the charges in Britain.

“It’s a high-profile case of two world-class players with the whole cricket world focused on it and we will fight to get the ban overturned,” Asif’s lawyer Ravi Sukul told AFP from London earlier this week.

“Asif was a terrific bowler and it was terribly unfortunate that a bowler of his class suffered this, but we will try our best to get this ban overturned and Asif is in high spirits.”

Asif, 30, played 23 Tests and 38 one-day internationals and was regarded as one of the best new-ball bowlers in the world.

Butt, 28, was made Test captain on the fateful tour of England, and Aamer was regarded as the fastest emerging bowler in the world.

Feb 022013
 
<b>Snooker</b>: Asif cruises into Sangsom semis
Pakistan’s IBSF world amateur champion Mohammad Asif continued his dominance by pipping local cueist Praprut Chaithanasakun 4-3 despite being two sets down in the quarter-finals of the Sangsom Mukdahan Cup in Thailand yesterday. He won with
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The Express Tribune

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