Vijender quizzed, says no to blood, hair tests

March 12, 2013

Vijender_SinghFatehgarh Sahib/Chandigarh, Mar 12: Beijing Olympic bronze medalist Vijender Singh was questioned for five hours by the police at Panchkula Police Lines on Monday in connection with the recovery of 26 kg of heroin worth Rs 130 crore last week. Asked by a team comprising both Punjab and Haryana police for his hair and blood samples, Vijender refused saying he would find it humiliating.

"I am not going to do this because I haven't taken the drug and giving the samples would be insulting to me," Vijender said, according to Punjab police DGP Sumedh Singh Saini.

Incidentally, substance detection period by hair tests confirms that drugs like heroin and morphine tend to lie down on the hair shaft and if the hair sample is long enough, drug testers may be able to determine when the drug use occurred over a 90-day period. The police have already sent Vijender's sparring partner Ram Singh's hair and blood samples to Fatehgarh Sahib civil hospital for testing.

Asked about 50 phone calls made from his mobile phone to Anoop Singh Kahlon, the jailed NRI from Canada and alleged drug peddler, Vijender sounded evasive. "My fans must have used the phone," he replied, according to police sources. On being questioned what he meant, Vijender reportedly said, "It must have been people at NIS who admire my boxing."

Vijender was also asked about the recovery of his Ford Endeavour near the flat of prime accused Anoop Singh Kahlon, an NRI from Canada and alleged drug peddler, and also about the statement of his sparring partner Ram Singh that the two had taken small quantities of the drug as "food supplements". The police declined to make public Vijender's replies to these questions.

Vijender reached Chandigarh at 11.30 am on Monday from Gurgaon, after being summoned by Haryana Police. He reached Police Lines in Panchkula at four pm and was joined by investigators of Punjab Police around 4.45 pm. The questioning began around five pm and Vijender came out of the room for a short while around 7.30 pm to speak to someone on his mobile phone, before going back in. His quizzing continued until 10pm.

It's learnt that the Haryana police decided to call Vijender after Punjab Police also wrote to them, asking them to call their "drug-consumer DSP" to join investigation in connection with the Rs 130-crore drug haul in Mohali. "International boxing star and Haryana Police DSP Vijender Singh has been consuming drugs and the details of his involvement have been shared with you. The investigation with him would be done in Haryana with the three investigation officers of Punjab joining the probe," the letter read.

"Our list of corroborating evidence against Vijender is growing. His friend Ram Singh and drug lord Anoop Singh Kahlon have made long confessions to us. We have text messages and phone call records," said SSP Fatehgarh Sahib district, Hardyal Singh Mann. However, he ruled out Vijender's involvement in peddling.

Punjab Police sources also said at least two corporate lawyers representing Vijender had reached Fatehgarh Sahib on Sunday. "They said that if we need to communicate with Vijender, it has to be through them. We refused to entertain them," said Mann. He added that Ram Singh was showing withdrawal symptoms like insomnia and restlessness after his detention.

"He mentions heroin and then stops short of making a pressing demand for it. Ten times a day, he seeks glucose-like energy drinks, often keeping awake for long hours after midnight," said Mann.

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News Network
July 25,2020

New Delhi, Jul 25: Former India spinner Anil Kumble said that he has never understood why people compared him with Australia's Shane Warne.

Kumble was doing an Instagram live session with former Zimbabwe pacer Pommie Mbangwa and it was then that the spinner also talked about being the third-highest wicket-taker in Test cricket.

"It feels really wonderful to finish with these many wickets. I never bothered about statistics or what my average should be, I wanted to bowl the whole day and be the one to take wickets. To finish as the third-highest wicket-taker in Tests alongside Murali and Warne is very special. All three of us played in the same era, there were a lot of comparisons, I do not know why people compared me with Warne. Warne was someone really different and he was on a different plane," Kumble told Mbangwa during the interaction.
"These two guys could spin the ball on any surface so it became really difficult for me when they started comparing me with Warne and Murali. I learnt a lot by watching them both bowl," he added.

The Indian spinner announced his retirement from international cricket in 2008. He finished with 619 wickets in the longest format of the game.

He has the third-highest number of wickets in Tests, only behind Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan (800) and Australia's Shane Warne (708).

Kumble is the second bowler in the history of international cricket after England's Jim Laker to take all ten wickets in an innings of a Test match.

He had achieved the feat against Pakistan in 1999 at the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium in Delhi. Kumble had bowling figures of 10-74 from 26.3 overs in the second innings of the Test match.
Kumble will be coaching Kings XI Punjab in the Indian Premier League (IPL). 

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News Network
July 24,2020

Bengaluru, Jul 24: Bangladesh all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan, who was earlier banned by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for breaching the Anti-Corruption Code, on Friday, said that people are bound to make mistakes and the important thing is that how well they make a comeback.

Shakib was banned from all forms of cricket on October 29 last year after he accepted the charges of breaching the ICC's Anti-Corruption Code. He will be able to resume international cricket from October 29, 2020.

"You have to be honest. You just can't lie to the people and pretend different things. Whatever happened has happened. People are bound to make mistakes. You are not 100%. The important thing is how well you can comeback from those mistakes. You can tell other people not to make those mistakes. Tell them the path so that they never take those paths," Shakib told Deep Dasgupta in a videocast hosted by ESPNcricinfo.

The 33-year-old all-rounder said he has seen many controversies ever since he was first made captain in 2009. He had trouble with the board chief, selectors and the media, mainly about selectorial decisions and not being made permanent captain between 2009 and 2010.
He believes those experiences have changed him as a person over time.

"I think [it's] combination of both [controversy following him, and vice versa]. I got the responsibility so early in my career, I was bound to make mistakes. I was captain when I was 21. I made a lot of mistakes, and there are so many things that people think about me. Now I realise that it was my fault in some areas, and in some I was misunderstood. But I get it completely. It is part and parcel in the subcontinent," Hasan said.

"Of course I will try to minimise [my mistakes] as much as I can, but by the time I got married, and now I have two kids, I understand the game and life better. It has made me a calmer person than I was in my twenties. I have changed quite a lot. People won't see me doing a lot of mistakes now. My two daughters changed my life completely," he added.

Shakib is likely return to international cricket during Bangladesh's proposed Test series against Sri Lanka in October. 

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Agencies
June 2,2020

New Delhi, Jun 2: Expressing solidarity with the 'Black Lives Matter' campaign, star West Indies batsman Chris Gayle has alleged that he faced racist remarks during his career and cricket is not free of the menace.

Gayle did not elaborate when he faced racial remarks but hinted it might have been during his stints at global T20 leagues.

"I have travelled the globe and experienced racial remarks towards me because I am black, believe me, the list goes on," he posted on instagram on Monday night.

"Racism is not only in football, it's in cricket too. Even within teams as a black man, I get the end of the stick. Black and powerful. Black and proud," he said.

The big-hitting batsman's comments came in the backdrop of African-American George Floyd's death in the USA after a white police officer, Derek Chauvin, pressed his knee on the handcuffed man's neck as he gasped for breath.

The incident has sparked violent protests across the USA.

"Black lives matter just like any other life. Black people matter, p***k all racist people, stop taking black people for fools, even our own black people wise the p***k up and stop bringing down your own!," Gayle wrote.

Racism in cricket was drew attention most recently last year when England pacer Jofra Archer was abused by a spectator in New Zealand.

New Zealand's top players and the cricket board had offered apologies for the incident to the Englishman.

Also on Monday night, the England cricket team's official twitter handle posted a message denouncing racism.

"We stand for diversity, We stand against racism," the message read.

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