sledger
Spanish_Vicente
He fixed an element of a match. Ergo the match was fixed. Ergo he is a match fixer.It may have been proportionate to match fixing, but as he didn't match fix it was arguably not proportionate to his actual crime.
He fixed an element of a match. Ergo the match was fixed. Ergo he is a match fixer.It may have been proportionate to match fixing, but as he didn't match fix it was arguably not proportionate to his actual crime.
There isn't but try to explaining that to a pedant.I just said fixing though - don't really see too much of a moral difference anyway.
Why the need to completely lose sight of a sense of scale and severity? Bowling a no ball on cue so some ****er can profit off it just isn't the same thing as throwing a matchThe idea that spot fixing is not the same as match fixing is bad. "Spots" are elements of a match. By fixing one you totally undermine the integrity of the other.
May as well say someone isn't a poisoner because they only poisoned part of a meal rather than the whole of it.
Precisely, it would be like allowing a drop of urine to fall into your drink, and then be told "don't worry, most of the drink is still ok". The entire match was contaminated, and this is reflected in the fact that he was charged (and convicted of) a criminal offence that is habitually used for dealing with match-fixers.Yeah, even if he took 6/13 after bowling a spot-fixed no-ball, the match was fixed.
Yes, indeed. But both were acts of match-fixing.The match was compromised, it's result was influenced, but the result was not fixed - clear difference.
The act was still so wrong as to be criminal, but there still lies a clear distinction between what he did and what the likes of Cronje did
You're right but he never should have played again anyway. Just because it's not the worst form of fixing doesnt mean the punishment he got was disproportionate. The guy got off easy. **** like this should be a death sentence for a career. Piss off and a new profession.The match was compromised, it's result was influenced, but the result was not fixed - clear difference.
The act was still so wrong as to be criminal, but there still lies a clear distinction between what he did and what the likes of Cronje did
This is the thing. It's not as bad as the Cronje incident, but it is still an instance of the same thing.You're right but he never should have played again anyway. Just because it's not the worst form of fixing doesnt mean the punishment he got was disproportionate. The guy got off easy. **** like this should be a death sentence for a career. Piss off and a new profession.
The same thing being the match was compromised, not that the end result of the match was fixed, which is my point.This is the thing. It's not as bad as the Cronje incident, but it is still an instance of the same thing.
I never said the result was fixed tbh. Just that the match, and various constituent elements of it, were.The same thing being the match was compromised, not that the end result of the match was fixed, which is my point.
I don't think anyone was suggesting there wasn't tbh.I'm not actually taking a stance on the punishment he received, just disagreeing that there is no difference in severity between the two aforementioned cases.
@sledger was not aware of that definition, seems to me that the term 'spot-fixing' is redundant if we are going to call 'match fixing' anything that improperly influences the progress of the match, hence I actually take issue with that definition, and therefore agree with your points if we were to accept that standard.
Are you saying Amir's fixing was good from a utilitarian POV? ITSTL.This is the thing. It's not as bad as the Cronje incident, but it is still an instance of the same thing.
It's like the difference between someone who goes out and shoots a bunch of people in cold blood, and someone else who puts a pillow over the face of a relative who is in unimaginable pain and has been asked to be put out of their misery. Both situations involve a murder, but one is of a decidedly different character to the other.
Haha well I don't think it would be that either, necessarily.Hmm, maybe I do but you could perhaps make a utilitarian argument for it. Perhaps I should've said consequentialist.
Correct, you implied that the result was null and void, which I am sympathetic to, however under most definitions and my own understanding this is what separates match fixing from spot fixing, semantic issue regarding terminology but I consider the two acts to be different crimes, not different expressions of the same crimeI never said the result was fixed tbh. Just that the match, and various constituent elements of it, were.