"What then changed between the Oval Test, when Majeed in all probability did not have Amir to bowl deliberate no-balls, and the night of the 25th, the eve of the Lord’s Test, when, from his confident tone and the specific nature of the predictions, he obviously did?
Amir takes up the story:
‘At around lunchtime on the 25th I got a call from Majeed to go and meet him in the car park of the team hotel. I was in the shower, and so I told him I would be down in five minutes and when I got the lift, Salman was also there. I went to Mazhar’s car, got in and all of a sudden it was as if someone launched an attack. He said to me: “you’re in big trouble, bro. You’re trapped and your career is at stake.” I said: “Bro, what exactly has happened?” He replied that my calls with Ali had been recorded buy the ICC police. I told him that, in any case, I had not done anything with Ali, but he insisted that a friend of his knew that they had a file with my name on it. He said he could help me out of my difficulties but that I had to do a favour for him in return. I asked him “what favour?” That’s when he mentioned the two no-balls.’
‘I realise now that nobody is more stupid than me, that I could not see how ridiculous it was that one the one hand he should be telling me that I was in trouble with the ICC and on the other that I should bowl him two no-balls. But I was panicking and I had lost the ability to comprehend what was going on. After about five minutes, Salman joined us and he sat in the back seat, leaning over between the two front seats, just listening. He didn’t say anything.
‘I told him that it was impossible because my feet were always behind the line, that it was a wrong thing to do and that I was scared. He told me not to worry and to practise bowling them at Lord’s during the practice sessions before the match. He said not to worry because Salman would be with me and would help me. I got out of the car and Salman, who still hadn’t said anything at this point, stayed behind. I was worried now and went and sat on the team bus to go to practice, worrying about what I was to do’
‘At Lord’s it was raining if I remember and we went to practise in the indoor school. Salman came up to me again and asked me whether I was going to bowl them. I told him again that I was scared. He said, “do it, nothing will happen.”’
Evidently at some stage during the afternoon of the 25th, before Majeed met the journalist at the Copthorne Tara hotel in the evening with the specifics of the fix, Amir decided to accede to their request. The phone records show that in the late afternoon of the 25th, after practice had finished, Amir spoke to Majeed for a minute at 5.30 p.m., to Majeed’s brother Azhar for a minute at 7.15p.m., and again to Majeed at 7.30 p.m. and 7.55 p.m. In between there were texts about tickets for the match. At 9.25 p.m. Amir texted Majeed his room number and by the time this meeting had finished the deed had been agreed.
At no stage, insists Amir, did Majeed mention anything about money.
From Amir’s hotel, Majeed went to meet the journalist at the Copthorne Tara with his now confident predictions.
What are we to make of Amir’s story? Nobody else has spoken of the meeting in Majeed’s car, as well they wouldn’t since Butt pleaded not guilty and Majeed would not want to jeopardise the mitigation of his own guilty plea. It is Amir’s word only.
Three pieces of evidence corroborate his story.
The first is the phone data which shows that between around 12.25p.m. and 12.40 p.m. on the 25th, all three parties were in the vicinity of Swiss Cottage where the team hotel (the Marriott) was. Sometime after 11.09 a.m. Majeed made his way from Chelsea and arrived in NW3 at around 11.43 a.m. At 13.05 p.m. Majeed’s phone trail put him on Park Lane. Phone data put both Amir and Butt at the team hotel in Swiss Cottage, prior to heading off to Lord’s for the afternoon practice. Amir’s phone revealed he arrived at Lord’s no later than 1.24 p.m. It is conceivable, then, from the phone evidence that the meeting took place.
The importance of August 25th for Amir is manifest from the phone evidence: this was the first time he had any contact with Majeed’s ‘safe’ phone. Throughout the episode, Majeed used two phone numbers, one ending in ‘786’, with which he seemed to conduct his normal business, and one ending in ‘819’ from which many of his suspicious calls and texts were made. The first contact Amir had with the ‘819’ number was at 11.12 p.m. on the 25th- during the meeting with the journalist in which the no-balls were promised in great detail.
The third is Amir’s curious text sent from Mazhar Majeed’s brother’s phone on August 28th, after the NOTW had informed the police and after the police had searched the three cricketers’ rooms. After that search, Amir was in the hotel lobby when he bumped into Azhar Majeed, Mazhar’s brother. He asked to use his phone and he sent the following text to Ali: ‘Amir here. Don’t call my phone. ICC police have taken my phone. Are you able to delete those calls you made to me. If you can do it, ok. Don’t reply.’
This text is consistent with Amir’s story that he knew nothing of the meetings between Majeed and the journalist, nothing of that scam and nothing of the money that was on offer from Mahmood’s fictional syndicate. At this stage, he was convinced that he was in trouble for his conversations with Ali before the Oval Test, not for the no balls he bowled for Majeed during the Lord’s Test. He says Majeed and Butt had told him that he would be finished, that the ICC knew of his incriminating conversations with Ali. Amir’s actions in texting Ali and telling him about the ‘ICC police’ are consistent with that.
Here is the irony: Amir bowled the no-balls because he thought, by doing so, it might help save his career. He was troubled by his involvement with Ali, and he says his captain and agent- two of his closest friends, remember- had warned him that this would jeopardise his career and they promised to help him out of his difficulties, if he bowled the no balls. Instead of saving his career, the no-balls ended it.
But what of the money, of the marked £1500 that was found in his room? Shortly after 9.30 p.m. after the first day’s play at Lord’s, Amir sent two texts to Majeed saying ‘ok’ and ‘come 227’. Majeed made his way to Amir’s room and it was at this point that Majeed gave Amir the £1500 in what turned out to be marked notes. Amir says that Majeed arrived into his room ‘looking like he had hit the jackpot, he was so happy. Like when I am happy to get a wicket, he was happy. He said “you are my younger brother” and he was buzzing with excitement. He suddenly came forward and told me to keep £1500. I said I didn’t need it. Why would I need it? I don’t require those things. He insisted, saying keep it anyway. He insisted.’
‘I knew why he was happy and that’s why I said I didn’t need it. He gave it to me in an envelope and I put it in the safe away from my own money. I had £8000 of my own money lying open in a bag. I never set eyes on Mazhar’s money and I didn’t touch it. No-one is that stupid not to realise that if he is getting me to deliver the no-balls, it must be because of some sort of bet. This was precisely the reason which I knew was behind his happiness.’
Clearly, Amir knew that he had done wrong, that he had, to use his own words, ‘cheated cricket’. Nevertheless, there is still no reason to suspect that Amir knew of Majeed’s scam with the NOTW journalist, nor the £150,000 that had been handed over. Financial gain played no part in Amir’s decision to bowl the no-balls. ‘I didn’t do it for money,’ he says. He also says that they would not have had to make up the story about the ICC knowing about his texts to Ali, if they were sure that he would simply do it for the money.
In the trial, Butt painted a picture of Amir as being far from an innocent. There are only two things to say in respect of any earlier evidence of fixing: one is that a source within the ICC’s anti-corruption unit acknowledged that at no stage before the summer of 2010 was Amir’s conduct under suspicion (despite the deep suspicion that descended on many of his team-mates). And as Justice Cooke said in his summing up, there is no evidence that Amir was engaged in a fix at the Oval.
Second, is the reaction of the journalist’s initial source, who is known to the Times. This source initially alerted the ICC to his suspicions and it was only after he became frustrated by the ICC’s inaction that he contacted the journalist. In doing so, the source’s aim was to shine a light on the corrupt practices within the Pakistan team. Amir was an unintended consequence of that.
There are a number of horrendous ironies in all this, not the least of which is Amir’s brilliance during the two matches in question. He was Man of the Match at the Oval and bowled superbly at Lord’s. Perhaps the greatest irony is that Amir thought, because of the warnings he says he was given by Majeed and Butt in the car, that he was bowling two no balls at Lord’s to save his career, when in fact they ended it."
I agree with Atherton. The boy was stuck and under pressure. No one would throw away their career for £1,500.00