Nah. They can't have tried to "frame" him, if they genuinely thought he said it.
And I don't think it was in anyway at all the players' idea to drop it - it was CA who very much lent on them, not the other way around.
I don't know how I'd go to a hearing as a witness, knowing even if every word I said was believed the accused bloke wasn't going to get convicted of the alleged abuse, because of the deal that was done beforehand. Once the deal had been done, that really should have been it.
The judge said he wanted the hearing to "clear things up", and it really didn't clear a bloody thing up, other than he thought Clarke's stuff was ordinary, Tendulkar's and Hayden's was impressive, and he thought Symonds' attitude to the game was wrong (like it matters what he thinks about how Symonds plays the game when that wasn't the thing he was asked to decide in the first place).
More I think about it, the more the hearing seemed a nice exercise in self-aggrandisement for the person presiding than really achieving anything, especially when everyone had decided the result before they even went in there.
Perhaps "frame" was the wrong choice of word.
But I do think they definitely genuinely believed Harbhajan said it, but there was no real way to prove that. And the fact that they could not get their guy off IF they did tell everything must have played a part on them deciding not to push the charge..
Quite frankly, no judge is going to believe that these Aussies heard everything that Harbhajan said but nothing that Symonds said, when it was evident that both of them were saying things to each other..
They may have very well felt that Harbhajan said the word "monkey" but the fact that proving it was going to be a very difficult exercise (because of the word "maa ki" s existence) and the fact that if all the facts did come out, it will result in some censure and punishment for Symonds himself, must have weighed on their minds when they agreed to drop the charges... A compromise, if you will and extremely practical..
And IMO, I wouldn't put it past Symonds or the Aussie team to have planned a strategy of going after Harbhajan whenever they got a chance.. He is a bit of a loose cannon with the mouth and is generally stupid and impulsive enough to say something foolish at the slightest provocation. It wouldn't surprise me if it were a planned strategy of Australia to have a go at blokes like Harbhajan and Sreesanth with some choice words every now and then and see if they can push them off the edge into telling something stupid and landing themselves in hot water. The support that Symonds got for doing what he did (stupidly interfering when nothing untoward had happened) from Ponting, Clarke and Hayden does suggest something like this was in their minds, at least to me.
Of course, to all the Aussie posters here, I am not insisting my opinion is the truth and quite obviously, there is no real way to find out now unless someone decides to write a tell-all book about this (and even then doubts would remain about the author's credibility) but this is what I think.. Aussies targetting certain guys in the opposition (for being soft and ready to go off easily) is nothing new..