CricketArchive
spacer spacer
topimage spacer
midimage spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer

spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer


spacer
spacer
spacerFeatures Logo spacer
spacer
spacer
Media Releases
Current Month
Previous Month
spacer
spacer
spacer
Ranking
Batting Ranking
Bowling Ranking
spacer
spacer
spacer
Pictures
Our Picture Galleries
spacer
spacer
spacer
Publications
Inquiries and Report
spacer
spacer
spacer
Search
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Scorecards
spacer
Scorecard search
spacer
Players
spacer
Scorecard search
spacer

spacer spacer spacer
spacer
spacer
Pakistan cricketers head home after Woolmer murder
by AFP


Event:ICC World Cup 2006/07

DateLine: 24th March 2007

Pakistan's cricketers, shaken by the murder of coach Bob Woolmer, which followed their ignominious World Cup exit, were to head home Saturday as Jamaican police hunted for clues about the killing.

Forensics experts took DNA samples and fingerprints from the players, but police and Pakistani cricket officials downplayed any suggestion that they were suspects in the murder of their 58-year-old coach.

"Our priority is to take the players back to Pakistan," team manager Talat Ali said.

"Everyone in Pakistan is looking forward (to their return), especially the families of the players. They want the boys back in Pakistan as soon as possible."

No arrests have yet been made in connection with the strangling of Woolmer, a former England international who had coached the Pakistan team since 2004.

Woolmer died in hospital on Sunday after being found unconscious in his hotel room, just one day after a stunning loss to Ireland knocked Pakistan, the 1992 World Cup champions, out of the tournament.

Jamaican police announced Thursday that he was strangled, and have since suggested that he may have known his killer or killers, amid swirling rumours about the possibility that match-fixing gangs could have been involved.

Authorities in Jamaica, one of the Caribbean nations hosting World Cup matches, ordered that an inquest be held before a jury as soon as possible, local media reported Friday, meaning that Woolmer's body would stay put.

Pakistan has dispatched a senior diplomat from Washington to liaise with Jamaican police. Meanwhile, team physiotherapist Darryn Lifson and trainer Murray Stevenson, both South Africans, said they would remain in Kingston.

"We promised the family to stay until everything is sorted out," Lifson told AFP, adding that authorities were keeping Woolmer's family informed of all developments in the case.

Jamaica's deputy police commissioner Mark Shields said the team members were "not being treated any differently from anyone else at this stage."

"It is important to eliminate as well as identify suspects," he told TVJ television.

In an interview with the BBC, Shields suggested that Woolmer's killer may not have been a stranger, and that more than one person may have been involved.

"Clearly he let somebody into his hotel room and it may be that he knew who that person was," Shields said.

Pakistan Cricket Board chief Naseem Ashraf dismissed the notion that any of the players could have been involved in the crime.

"No, there is no suspicion on the Pakistan team. This is ridiculous," Ashraf told AFP.

"The Pakistani team were at the hotel like everyone else (and) they gave their statements -- they were never interrogated. The whole team is under a lot of trauma and stress."

The players were to leave Jamaica on Saturday after two days in Montego Bay, where Ashraf said they had been taken out of fears for their safety.

Ashraf also rejected suggestions that Woolmer may have been the victim of criminal gangs who were fearful he could expose their match-fixing activity in a book he was planning to write.

"There is no truth in the reports that Bob was killed by gambling mafia," he told a press conference in Islamabad, a theory also rejected by Woolmer's family.

"Contrary to reports, we can confirm there is nothing in any book Bob has written that would explain this situation and there were no threats received," said a statement issued by Woolmer's wife Gill and sons Dale and Russell from Cape Town.

Woolmer was coach of South Africa when their former captain Hansie Cronje was bought off by bookmakers in 1996, but was never alleged to have been involved himself.

England captain Michael Vaughan said in an interview published Saturday that he thought match-fixing was still happening.

Asked by The Sun newspaper whether he believed match-rigging goes on in the world game, Vaughan said: "If I'm honest, yes, I think it does."

Since taking over the Pakistan team in 2004, Woolmer had talked of the stresses of managing one of the most volatile teams in world cricket.

His family said Woolmer would have wanted the sport's showpiece tournament to go on.

"He gave his life to the service of cricket and cricketers and endeared himself to anyone who came into contact with him," the statement said.

"Bob would definitely have wanted the World Cup to continue."

(Article: Copyright © 2007 AFP) spacer

spacer spacer
spacer
Live Commentary & Scores
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer

spacer
Pakistan International Cricket
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Pakistan in West Indies 2016/17
spacer
Pakistan in Australia 2016/17
spacer
Pakistan in New Zealand 2016/17
spacer
Pakistan Women in New Zealand 2016/17
spacer
West Indies in UAE 2016/17
spacer
Pakistan in England and Ireland 2016
spacer
Pakistan Women in England 2016
spacer
ICC Women's World Twenty20 2015/16
spacer
ICC World Twenty/20 2015/16
spacer
Asia Cup 2015/16
spacer
ICC Under-19 World Cup 2015/16
spacer
Pakistan in New Zealand 2015/16
spacer
England Lions in United Arab Emirates 2015/16
spacer
England in United Arab Emirates 2015/16
spacer
Pakistan Under-19s in Sri Lanka 2015/16
spacer
Pakistan Women in West Indies and USA 2015/16
spacer
Bangladesh Women in Pakistan 2015/16
spacer
Pakistan in Zimbabwe 2015/16
spacer
ICC Women's Championship 2014 to 2016/17
spacer
Pakistan Defence Force in England 2015
spacer
Pakistan in Sri Lanka 2015
spacer
Pakistan A in Sri Lanka 2015
spacer
Pakistan in Bangladesh 2015
spacer
Zimbabwe in Pakistan 2015
spacer
Afghanistan Under-19s in Pakistan 2014/15
spacer
Australia in United Arab Emirates 2014/15
spacer
ICC World Cup 2014/15
spacer
Kenya in Pakistan 2014/15
spacer
New Zealand in United Arab Emirates 2014/15
spacer
Pakistan in New Zealand 2014/15
spacer
Pakistan Under-19s in Kenya 2014/15
spacer
Pakistan A in United Arab Emiraes 2014/15
spacer
South Africa Women in UAE 2014/15
spacer
Sri Lanka Women in United Arab Emirates 2014/15
spacer

2016/17 | 2016 | 2015/16 | 2015 | 2014/15 | 2014 | 2013/14 | 2013 | 2012/13 | 2012 | 2011/12 | All Seasons


spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer


spacer
spacer
spacer
Pakistan International Cricket
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Cool and Cool Presents National T-20 Cup 2016/17
spacer
Inter-Region Under 19 One-Day Tournament 2016/17
spacer
Inter-Region Under 19 Tournament 2016/17
spacer
National One Day Cup Regions 2016/17
spacer
One Day Cup Departments 2016/17
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy (Grade II) 2016/17
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy 2016/17
spacer
Haier Pakistan Cup One Day 2016
spacer
Inter-District Senior Tournament 2016
spacer
Inter-District Under 19 Tournament 2016
spacer
MFJN Women's Cricket Championship 2016
spacer
Pepsi PCB Cricket Stars U16s Tmnt 2016
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy (Grade II) 2015/16
spacer
PCB Patron's Trophy (Grade II) 2015/16
spacer
HBL Pakistan Super League 2015/16
spacer
National One Day Cup 2015/16
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy 2015/16
spacer
PCB Game Development Under 19 Pentangular Tournament 2015/16
spacer
Cool and Cool Presents Haier Mobile T-20 Cup 2015/16
spacer
Inter-Region Under 19 One-Day Tournament 2015/16
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy Inter Department Qualifying 2015/16
spacer
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy Inter Region Qualifying 2015/16
spacer

2016/17 | 2016 | 2015/16 | 2015 | 2014/15 | 2014 | 2013/14 | 2013 | 2012/13 | 2012 | 2011/12 | 2011 | All Seasons

spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer

spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
Other International Cricket
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer

Copyright © 2004-2017 Micro Electronics Technology Inc., and CricketArchive