Showing posts with label bob woolmer murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bob woolmer murder. Show all posts
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Woolmer remembered in memorial service

Sunday, September 9, 2007


LONDON: Bob Woolmer's life and career in cricket was honoured during a remembrance service at St John's Wood Church near Lord's here on Friday, as 200 friends, family and colleagues gathered to hear a moving tribute from the former England captain, Chris Cowdrey, who recalled Woolmer as his boyhood "hero".

Woolmer collapsed and died in his hotel room in Kingston, Jamaica, on March 18, hours after his Pakistan team had been knocked out of the World Cup by Ireland. The circumstances of his death were initially deemed to be suspicious, but after a lengthy investigation, Jamaica police admitted that he had died of natural causes.

Among the mourners were David Collier and David Morgan of the ECB, Ashley Giles and Mike Gatting, and Woolmer's widow Gill, and their two sons, Dale and Russell. They listened to an address from Cowdrey in which Woolmer's boyish enthusiasm for cricket was celebrated.

"Every day for Bob Woolmer was like a little boy going to his first ever match,"
said Cowdrey, whose father Colin played alongside him in the great Kent side of the 1970s.
"I would listen in wonder to my hero talking cricket."


Cowdrey made particularly reference to Woolmer's early years in South Africa, when he set out to work with disadvantaged club cricketers in a country that was still in the grip of the Apartheid regime.
"It was perhaps in Cape Town that I realised that Bob Woolmer was the most honourable, spirited person that I have ever known,"
said Cowdrey.

"It didn't faze Bob that South Africa was in political turmoil, soldiers and police ever present - sounds of gunshots and the smell of tear gas - he just kept the children focused on their net sessions. Then those who didn't have transport he would drive safely home. He was coach, groundsman, captain, mentor and coach driver.

"Bob Woolmer was an extraordinary man who treated everyone as equals."

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‘Pakistan await vindication over Bob’

Saturday, June 9, 2007


LAHORE: Former Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul-Haq has urged Jamaican authorities to reveal the cause of coach Bob Woolmer’s death as soon as possible and finally clear the team of involvement.


Jamaican police are reportedly due to announce that Woolmer — who was found dead in his hotel room the day after the team were knocked out of the World Cup — was not murdered after all


.“Time will prove our innocence in the case and we want it to be over sooner
rather than later,” Inzamam said. “Besides the entire trauma, I was alleged
to be, God forbid, involved in Bob’s murder,”

he expressed.


“Now the true facts are coming out and I am thankful to Almighty,”

he added.


Inzamam said the team were still shaken by the days between March 17, when minnows Ireland sent Pakistan out of the World Cup, and March 28, when they returned home with police saying they were still in the frame.


"Those were the most traumatic days of our lives. We were thrown out of the World
Cup, Bob died and no one contacted us from Pakistan to give us any consolation,”

said Inzamam.


“I pray no Pakistani ever has to go through such circumstances,”

said Inzamam, who quit one-day cricket and relinquished the captaincy after the World Cup.


The PCB said it has yet to receive any information from the Jamaican police and would not comment until a formal announcement comes from the Caribbean.

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Sangakkara, Vaas and Murali to miss Abu Dhabi series

Monday, May 7, 2007

The three-match one-day international series between Sri Lanka and Pakistan will take place in Abu Dhabi between May 18 and 22. Sri Lanka, however, will be missing Muttiah Muralitharan, Chaminda Vaas and Kumar Sangakkara who have county commitments in England.


K Mathivanan, the Sri Lanka Cricket secretary, said he had received confirmation that the series would be played from May 18-22 and that Sri Lanka would receive US$ 750,000 as participation fees from the Abu Dhabi Cricket Council (ADCC) who have organised the matches. He said Sri Lanka would leave for Abu Dhabi on May 15 and the matches would take place on May 18, 20 and 22.


The series was originally slated to begin on May 9 but Sri Lanka sought a postponement after they qualified for the World Cup final against Australia and were later stranded in London without a connecting flight to Colombo following the cancellation of flights to the capital due to air raids conducted by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The team eventually arrived in Colombo on May 3.

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PCB Nominates Mohsin Khan As Member Afro Asia Selection Committee

Friday, May 4, 2007


Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has nominated former Test opening batsman Mohsin Hassan Khan to represent Pakistan as the member of the Afro Asia Cup Selection Committee. The committee will select an Asian team for the Afro Asia event to be held in India.



The committee will select a team for the following events:


5th June - Twenty20 (Afro-Asia) match in Bangalore


6th June - 1st ODI (Afro-Asia) in Bangalore


9th June - 2nd ODI (Afro-Asia) in Chennai


10th June - 3rd ODI (Afro-Asia) in Chennai



Other members of the Selection Committee are ASM Fauque from Bangladesh, Chetan Chauhan from India and Lalith Kaluperuma from Bangladesh. The committee will meet on May 11 in Dhaka.



Mohsin Khan has also remained associated with PCB in the past as the coach and manager of junior teams.


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Woolmer murder case: 80 people seen on CCTV to be identified

Thursday, May 3, 2007


JAMAICA: Jamaican police said that it was investigating about the 80 persons, who were seen on close circuit television. They were supposed to have met with Bob Woolmer on that tragic night when he was reportedly murdred.


Deputy Commissioner Police Mark Schields told a foreign news agency that some 80 persons were seen on CCTV coming to meet Woolmer in the Pegasus Hotel in Jamaica.


Investigations are being carried out for identifying dozens of them.


Mark Schields did not tell that how many of them have so far been identified.


He said that the police is considering the possibilities that if there was any religious tussle in the team behind the murder. However, he said that their investigations were not focusing this point.


Next week, Mark Schields will discuss the issue with toxicology experts in Britain and later proceed to Sout Africa for interviewing Gill Woolmer.


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Cricketers not allowed to talk with media

LAHORE: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has strictly restricted all cricketers from talking with media.

The training camp of the probable players of Pakistan cricket team is in full swing in Lahore these days. But all players including captain are not permitted to talk with electronic and print media.

Director Cricket Operations Zakir Khan said that this is a part of Board’s new code of conduct. This will be strictly implemented and no player would talk with media.

Will Pakistan Premier League gain success just like Indian Premier League ?