Australia cricket board hits back at ‘outlandish’ fixing claims

(Reuters) – Cricket Australia (CA) has hit back at  allegations Australian players are involved in match-fixing,  saying the claims made by a sports agent were “baseless and  outlandish”.
Sports agent Mazhar Majeed, accused of taking bribes to fix  matches, had said Australian cricketers were “the biggest”  culprits of fixing and they fixed “brackets”, a set period of a  match on which punters bet, a London court heard on Monday.
In response, CA Chief Executive James Sutherland told  reporters that the allegations appeared to be “outlandish”.
“The sweeping statements unfairly malign Australian  cricketers,” Sutherland said on Tuesday. “We haven’t been able  to speak to the International Cricket Council overnight … but  we will definitely make contact with them very quickly.”
Sutherland said the world governing body of the sport had a  very sophisticated anti-corruption unit and he would have been  tipped off by the ICC if an Australian cricketer was on the  radar.
“The ICC attend every single international cricket match  with their anti-corruption unit and there is nothing I have  heard to suggest that there are Australian players who are of  interest to them,” he added.
Agent Majeed, 36, told an undercover journalist that  match-fixing had been going on “for centuries” and named  celebrated former Pakistan fast-bowlers Wasim Akram and Waqar  Younis as alleged participants, the court heard.
The CA chief said it would work with the ICC to investigate  a player if any credible evidence was uncovered.
“If we charge players and we find them guilty we will have  no qualms about issuing a life sentence on players who are found  guilty of match fixing,” he added.