Life after match-fixing: How do cricketers handle the backlash?
As Pakistan fast bowler Mohammad Amir returns to international duty after serving a prison sentence for spot-fixing, former South African cricketer Herschelle Gibbs describes what it was like to return to playing competitively after being banned for his involvement in match-fixing.
Gibbs received a six-month ban in August of 2000 for accepting a 拢10,000 bribe proposed by the then Proteus captain Hansie Cronje to underperform in a one-day match against India, although he later denied carrying through with the proposal.
鈥淚t was a difficult year or two after everything unfolded,鈥 said the 41-year-old.
鈥淚 do remember the first Test match playing against Sri Lanka, they obviously made a point of reminding me. I couldn鈥檛 really focus on my batting.鈥
(Photo: Mohammad Amir during the 4th Test against England 2010. Credit: Getty Images)
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