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Stevens’ ‘two years of hell’ in anti-corruption spotlight

Update : 03 Mar 2015, 06:04 PM

The Dhaka Gladiators and Kent all-rounder Darren Stevens has spoken for the first time about how his career was thrown into turmoil when he was charged with failing to report an approach from a would-be match-fixer.

In a video recorded for the Professional Cricketers Association, he describes going through “two years of hell” when accused of failing to contact the International Cricket Council’s anti-corruption unit while playing for Gladiators in the Bangladesh Premier League two years ago. A Bangladesh Cricket Board anti-corruption tribunal found him not guilty of two charges in February last year.

Stevens says he was approached by the owner of the Dhaka Gladiators, asking if he would captain the side for a match against Chittagong – but with the team still to be run on the field by batsman Mohammad Ashraful. The Kent man declined the offer but was later contacted by Alan Peacock of the ICC’s anti-corruption unit when they investigated a wider conspiracy at the franchise.

“When I got two charges through, I wouldn’t wish it on anybody; it was brutal. The next meeting was a four-and-a-half hour meeting in London,” explained Stevens. “After that it was hours and hours and hours of meetings with my lawyer going through everything, going through how the next six months up to the trial were probably going to pan out then finally getting out to Bangladesh and going through everything.

“The trial in Bangladesh was in a small room in a bank with cameras everywhere all different lawyers from all over the place in the same room you just felt claustrophobic.”

He added: “I was there for nearly four weeks, five days a week in court going through everything. Just sitting there in court was more nerve-wracking than anything I have ever done. Cricket is my life and has been for 25-30 years. Every day that I was playing it just felt like it was going to be my last game.”

“It was horrific. Because I didn’t report a suspicious act at the time, I have gone through hell over the last two years,” he said.

“I don’t want anybody to go through what I actually went through over those two years. In any of these tournaments, anywhere around the world, whatever tournament you are playing in if you do come across anything suspicious just report it immediately.”

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