
Playing to Fix
From the Streets of Dubai to the Brink of Cricket's World Cup and Back Again
Paul Radley(Author)
Pitch Publishing Ltd
Published on 20. May 2024
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-80150-715-8 (ISBN)
Description
Playing to Fix tells the story of a group of Dubai street cricketers who chased down the dream of international cricket, working their way from dusty, tape-ball cricket on desert pitches to the international stage and almost reaching the pinnacle of world cricket ... only to throw it all away by being drawn into the murky world of match fixing.
This is the story of the United Arab Emirates team, who were on the brink of qualifying for the 2019 T20 World Cup in England. Instead of making it to the finals, a number of the players were seduced by the illegal betting syndicates operating across in the Indian subcontinent. They fell from the incredible high of competing against - and in some cases beating - the world's best cricketers, to the shattering low of being caught by the ICC's anti-corruption unit for match fixing, resulting in lengthy bans and a very public humiliation.
With unprecedented insight and access to those fighting to rid cricket of fixing, experienced cricket writer and award-winning journalist Paul Radley lifts the lid on this incredible story. He explains how cricket's ruling bodies caught the cheats; details the secret meeting on a Dubai beach, which descended into chaos, violence and ultimately saw the team drawn into the scandal; and tells a story so bizarre it includes bogus sponsors, Siberian huskies, a player being evicted from a hotel and a cross-border search for an AWOL wicketkeeper.
This is the story of the United Arab Emirates team, who were on the brink of qualifying for the 2019 T20 World Cup in England. Instead of making it to the finals, a number of the players were seduced by the illegal betting syndicates operating across in the Indian subcontinent. They fell from the incredible high of competing against - and in some cases beating - the world's best cricketers, to the shattering low of being caught by the ICC's anti-corruption unit for match fixing, resulting in lengthy bans and a very public humiliation.
With unprecedented insight and access to those fighting to rid cricket of fixing, experienced cricket writer and award-winning journalist Paul Radley lifts the lid on this incredible story. He explains how cricket's ruling bodies caught the cheats; details the secret meeting on a Dubai beach, which descended into chaos, violence and ultimately saw the team drawn into the scandal; and tells a story so bizarre it includes bogus sponsors, Siberian huskies, a player being evicted from a hotel and a cross-border search for an AWOL wicketkeeper.
Reviews / Votes
"The story of fixers - mainly from India - has been frequently told but rarely with as much fascinating detail. The author brings forensic insight into a story written with balance and panache. His access to inside information including recorded conversations and text messages is remarkable." * The Cricketer * "This book stands out through the access that Paul [Radley] has to a group of players at the centre... Despite his access Paul does not pull his punches, he pours over the investigation as these players breakdown. Within sight of realising their dream they throw it all away." -- Matt Williams * William Hill Sports Book of the Year *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Hove
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 223 mm
Width: 145 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
404 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80150-715-8 (9781801507158)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul Radley is an award-winning sportswriter based in Dubai, where he works for The National newspaper. His work has also appeared in a number of other publications, including the Wisden Almanack, The Telegraph, The Cricketer, and ESPNcricinfo. Before starting out in journalism, he briefly worked for the ICC at Lord's, nearly set the shredder on fire, and was not invited back. Playing to Fix is his first book.