IPL team owner admits illegal bets: police

Rajasthan co-owner Kundra ordered to hand over passport.


Afp June 06, 2013
Raj Kundra has been ordered to hand over his passport to police probing illegal betting and alleged corrupt links between players and organised crime syndicates. PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI: A co-owner of an Indian Premier League team became the latest person embroiled in a growing spot-fixing and betting scandal after he admitted illegal gambling, according to police yesterday.

Raj Kundra, co-owner of the Rajasthan Royals franchise and husband of Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty, has been ordered to hand over his passport to police probing illegal betting and alleged corrupt links between players and organised crime syndicates.

“He [Kundra] has been called [for questioning] because we came to know through interrogation that he himself used to bet and he has admitted he put money on his own team,” Delhi police commissioner Neeraj Kumar told reporters.

“We also found he lost large sums of money through betting.”

So far, three players from the Rajasthan Royals and numerous bookmakers are among those arrested over allegations of spot-fixing and betting during the recently completed edition of the cash-rich Twenty20 tournament.



Test bowler Shanthakumaran Sreesanth and two of his teammates have been accused of deliberately bowling badly in specific IPL matches in exchange for tens of thousands of dollars after striking deals with bookies.

A court this week denied them bail after police said they now had evidence, including telephone intercepts, linking international organised crime syndicates to the scandal.

The betting and fixing scandal has shaken confidence in the game and enraged fans in this cricket-mad nation.

The scandal has engulfed not only Indian but Asian cricket, following admissions in Bangladesh this week by the former captain of match-fixing.

In India, police commissioner Kumar said the probe into the scandal was being expanded, threatening more damage to the top of the IPL competition which features domestic and international players.

“Right now we cannot say which direction the investigation will go, or what else will surface in the future,” said Kumar.

Among those already arrested are the son-in-law of the Indian cricket board chief, Gurunath Meiyappan, for allegedly placing bets on matches. Meiyappan, who was granted bail by a court this week, is an executive of the Chennai Super Kings, another IPL team.

N Srinivasan has been forced to step aside as president of the Indian sport’s governing body, while an internal investigation into the scandal takes place.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 7th, 2013.

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