Below are a list of Test and or One Day International cricketers who have been banned by the governing body for cricket, the International Cricket Council for match fixing or spot-fixing. Both are misdemeanors banned under the ICC Cricket Code of Conduct.
Player | National team | Length of ban | Details | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Saleem Malik | Pakistan | Life ban (Overturned in 2008) | Banned in 2000 for offering bribes | [1] |
2 | Ata-ur-Rehman | Pakistan | Life ban (Overturned in 2006) | Banned in 2000 for dealings with bookmakers | [2] |
3 | Mohammad Azharuddin | India | Life ban | Declared guilty as per the BCCI. He rejects this and have taken the matter to court where it is currently sub-judice. | [3] |
4 | Ajay Sharma | India | Life ban | Found guilty in 2000 for associating with bookmakers | [4] |
5 | Manoj Prabhakar | India | 5 year ban | In 2000 he tried to implicate Kapil Dev and others but it backfired as he was found guilty himself | [5] |
6 | Ajay Jadeja | India | 5 year ban (Overturned in 2003) | Alleged to have associated with bookmakers | [6] |
7 | Hansie Cronje | South Africa | Life ban | Guilty of accepting monetary rewards from bookmakers. For Forecasting matches | [7] |
8 | Herschelle Gibbs | South Africa | 6 months | Initially agreed to underperform in an ODI game at Nagpur, but reneged on the deal and scored 74 off just 53 balls | [8] |
9 | Henry Williams | South Africa | 6 months | Initially agreed to underperform in an ODI game at Nagpur | [9] |
10 | Maurice Odumbe | Kenya | 5 years | Receiving money from bookmakers | [10] |
11 | Marlon Samuels | West Indies | 2 years | Receiving money, benefit or other reward which could bring him or the game into disrepute | [11] |
12 | Mohammad Amir | Pakistan | 5 years | Bowling deliberate planned no-balls against England in August 2010. In November 2011 he was sentenced to six months in a young offenders institution by Southwark Crown Court, England, for conspiracy to cheat at gambling and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments.[12] | [13] |
13 | Mohammad Asif | Pakistan | 7 years (2 years suspended) | Bowling deliberate planned no-balls against England in August 2010. In November 2011 he was sentenced to 12 months in prison by Southwark Crown Court, England, for conspiracy to cheat at gambling and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments.[14] | [15] |
14 | Salman Butt | Pakistan | 10 years (5 years suspended) | Orchestrating the bowling of deliberate no-balls against England in August 2010. In November 2011 he was sentenced to 2 years and 6 months in prison by Southwark Crown Court, England, for conspiracy to cheat at gambling and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments.[16] | [17] |