‘Life ban too harsh for Sreesanth’

If guilty, it is for failure to disclose about fixing, says advocate

February 27, 2019 09:50 pm | Updated 09:50 pm IST - New Delhi

S. Sreesanth.

S. Sreesanth.

Former Indian cricketer S. Sreesanth on Wednesday told the Supreme Court that a life ban from the game is too harsh a punishment.

“Life ban given to Mohd. Azharuddin (former India captain) was overturned. Pakistan’s Salim Malik got a life ban but it was overturned. Hansie Cronje was given life ban but he died in a plane crash when proceedings were not closed,” senior advocate Salman Khurshid, for Sreesanth, told a Bench of Justices Ashoka Bhushan and K.M. Joseph.

Khurshid argued that despite the ban and losing the best part of his career, Sreesanth has remained loyal to the BCCI and wants to “reconnect” with the Board.

“What about effort to fix?” Justice Bhushan asked.

Nothing on record

“If at all he is guilty of anything, it is for failure to disclose about fixing, etc., despite having knowledge. That will make him guilty only of the least punishable offence. There is nothing on record to warrant a lifetime ban”, Khurshid replied.

Khurshid submitted that his client had suffered “continuous torture” in the hands of the Delhi Police. He was at one time forced to confess to something he did not do after being threatened that his family would also be arrested.

“It is a fact that he used a towel. Many players do. There was no criminal intent or foul play. Too much is being read into it. The court had discharged him finally,” Khurshid had argued.

BCCI would begin its response in the case on February 28.

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