- I was shocked. I sort of thought he
may have been joking, but I quickly became aware that he was not:
McCullum on Cairns' spot-fix approach.
- McCullum said that Cairns had spoken to him in a hotel in Kolkata in 2008 during the first season of the Indian Premier League.
- McCullum also narrated a brief telephonic conversation and one over red wine and a curry with Cairns, about spot-fixing.
- McCullum said that Cairns had spoken to him in a hotel in Kolkata in 2008 during the first season of the Indian Premier League.
- McCullum also narrated a brief telephonic conversation and one over red wine and a curry with Cairns, about spot-fixing.
Adding credence of
Lou Vincent's accusation of match-fixing, current
Kiwi skipper Brendon McCullum told a London court that former
all-rounder Chris Cairns had approached him three times to throw away
matches. McCullum, who previously dubbed Cairns as his 'hero', said that
the former star had spoken to him in a hotel in Kolkata in 2008 during
the first season of the Indian Premier League. Following two more
advances from Cairns, McCullum reported him to the authority in February
2011.
"I was shocked. I sort of thought he may have been joking,
but I quickly became aware that he was not joking. He said that
everybody is doing it, all the big boys are doing it. Will you take it
on? Chris was a hero, I did not feel threatened by his approaches.","
McCullum told Cairns' perjury trial.
McCullum narrated incidents
of Cairns approaching him over a "pretty brief" telephonic conversation
and then over a bottle of red wine and a curry in the latter's hotel
room. Cairns, McCullum says, had used a piece of paper to meticulously
illustrate how spot-fixing worked and that it could fetch anything
between $70,000 and $200,000 each. Cairns had also let in his secret of
how he hid the added income he earned from such events - by investing
them in property back home.
McCullum revealed to the court that he
had spoken out and reached out to the authorities after after the New
Zealand team were given a talk by the Anti-Corruption and Security Unit
during the 2011 World Cup.
The charges facing Cairns relate to a
libel case that the 45-year-old brought against Lalit Modi, the founder
of the IPL, in March 2012. Cairns successfully sued Modi for 1.4 million
($2.14 million) after being accused of match-fixing on Twitter in
January 2010, but now faces allegations that he lied during the case.
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