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Harbhajan
faces ban over slapping row
Mohali—Harbhajan Singh has been temporarily suspended from the Indian
Premier League following his spat with Sreesanth at the end of the
Mumbai-Punjab game in Mohali on Friday. His suspension, based on new
video evidence, is pending an inquiry on Monday into the incident, which
means he will not be able to play Mumbai’s home match against the Deccan
Chargers.
“Based on prima facie video evidence, as seen and reviewed by the match
adjudicator and referee Farokh Engineer from the tapes provided by Sony
& TWI, a decision has been reached to suspend Harbhajan pending the
inquiry into the incident on Monday, April 28,” Lalit Modi, chairman and
commissioner of IPL, said.
The fresh video evidence, Cricinfo has learnt, is based on additional
footage of the incident from one of the host broadcaster’s 21 cameras at
the match. “This footage clearly shows the incident and could be the
clinching evidence,” a senior BCCI official told Cricinfo. It was this
footage that prompted the IPL to swiftly announce Harbhajan’s suspension
after it was earlier decided that he could play on Sunday, the official
said.
The IPL hearing, scheduled to start at 1pm local time, will be held at a
hotel in New Delhi and the verdict is expected to be announced by Monday
evening. “From King’s XI Punjab, the complainant Neil Maxwell [the
franchise CEO], Yuvraj Singh, the captain, and Sreesanth will be
present, apart from any other witnesses they wish to present. From the
Mumbai Indians, Lalchand Rajput, the coach, will be specifically
present. Harbhajan and the team manager will also be present,” an IPL
official said.
Although both players sought to play down the incident on Saturday, the
BCCI, which runs IPL, said that it had taken “serious note” of the
incident and would initiate a separate probe into it. “My message to
Indian players, who have got contractual obligations with the board, is
that they have to honour each and every guideline about discipline which
the board has communicated to them, and they have accepted and signed,”
Sharad Pawar, the BCCI president, said.
“If somebody is going to violate them, the board will not sit as a
silent spectator. The IPL committee, I hope, will take a separate
decision,” Pawar said.
Niranjan Shah, the BCCI secretary, said the board condemned Harbhajan’s
behaviour. “He is called upon to explain why disciplinary action should
not be taken against him. And [Harbhajan] has been asked for a
clarification by Monday evening [April 28].”
Modi clarified the ICC’s conduct norms would be followed for the IPL
probe, even though the Twenty20 tournament has been officially tagged as
a domestic event. Under the level 4.1 of the ICC rules, physical assault
of another player, umpire, referee, official or spectator will result in
a ban of between five Tests or 10 one-day internationals up to a life
ban for the player or official concerned. “We are not going to sweep
things under the carpet,” Engineer said. He also confirmed an official
complaint from the Mohali franchise, which owns Kings XI Punjab, had
been referred to him by Modi.
“Kings XI Punjab confirms a formal complaint against Harbhajan Singh was
submitted to the BCCI earlier today,” a Punjab team official said. “The
complaint is in relation to Friday’s incident following the match
against Mumbai Indians, where Harbhajan made an unprovoked attack on
Sreesanth. The Kings XI Punjab team and management consider this
behaviour unacceptable and against the spirit of the game.”
Meanwhile, the Mumbai Indians are hopeful the issue will be resolved
amicably. Bought at US$111.9 million, Mumbai are the most expensive of
the eight IPL franchises but are yet to win a game. Harbhajan was asked
to lead the side after Sachin Tendulkar, their icon player, failed to
recover from a groin injury.—Agencies |