Guernsey Press

On this day in 2012: Mohammad Amir leaves prison after spot-fixing sentence

The left-armer admitted bowling two intentional no-balls in a 2010 Lord’s Test match.

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Pakistan paceman Mohammad Amir was released from prison on this day in 2012 following his part in a spot-fixing scam.

Amir, team-mate Mohammad Asif and their captain Salman Butt were jailed the previous November for a plot to bowl deliberate no-balls in a Test match against England in 2010.

The then 19-year-old Amir was given a six-month sentence and had served half that when he was freed from Portland Prison in Dorset.

Pakistan betting scandal
Mohammad Amir, left, and captain Salman Butt, right, pictured after news of the spot-fixing scandal broke (Ben Birchall/PA)

The reporter pretended to be a wealthy Indian businessman seeking major international cricketers for a tournament, and Majeed was secretly filmed accepting £150,000 in cash as part of an arrangement to rig games.

Majeed promised the reporter that Asif and Amir would deliver three no-balls at specific points during a Lord’s Test.

Amir admitted bowling two intentional no-balls at Lord’s and, like Butt and Asif, was given a five-year playing ban.

The left-arm bowler returned to cricket in 2015 and was back on the international stage for Pakistan the following year.

Pakistan v South Africa – ICC Cricket World Cup – Group Stage – Lord’s
Mohammad Amir returned from his five-year ban to play for Pakistan at the 2019 World Cup in England (Nigel French/PA)

At the age of 28 he announced his retirement from international cricket in December 2020, claiming he had been treated in a “shabby” manner and “mentally tortured” by the Pakistan team’s management.

Amir, who made his debut against Sri Lanka in 2009, took 119 wickets in 36 Tests at an average of 30.47. He claimed another 145 wickets for Pakistan in the limited-overs game, 86 in one-day internationals and 59 in Twenty20 cricket.

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