In the wake of the spot-fixing scandal affecting Pakistan cricket, local officials have rejected the idea that West Indies might ever face a similar predicament. During the Lord's Test match between Pakistan and England last month, bowlers Mohammed Asif and Mohammed Amir were allegedly bribed to bowl deliberate no balls at specific points in the match. The crime fell under the category of spot-fixing, where minor incidents can be premeditated rather than the entire result. One West Indian player, Marlon Samuels, has ever been found guilty associating with a bookie. In May 2008, the ICC banned the batsman for two years for giving out team information during West Indies' tour of India in January 2007.
Former West Indies offspinner Ranji Nanan, the team's liaison officer when it is in T&T, said that the West Indies players had a clean record apart from the Samuels' incident. "I've spent a lot of time with the team and I know for a fact that it has never happened," he said. "I have never suspected any of our players and I feel safe they will not fall into that trap." Nanan also pointed out that future transgressions were unlikely to happen since the players had learnt their lesson after seeing what happened to Samuels. He added that several players from around the world had admitted to being approached since the scandal broke, though no West Indians had come forward. T&T team manager Colin Borde said that the West Indies recent run of bad form was the result of a "lack of consistency" rather than any outside influences.
"I've not seen any signs of match or spot-fixing and I don't think the players are part of that at all," he said. Despite his confidence, Borde felt it was important for administrators to do all that they could in order to prevent such incidents from happening. "The possibilities exist so we must do everything to keep West Indies as clean as possible. We must be very vigilant and keep our eyes and ears to the ground," he said. "It's important to educate young players about what is acceptable and what is not." Borde said he had little sympathy for those found guilty and that punishment needed to be swift. "If the perpetrators are found guilty, it should not be tolerated. Greed is not acceptable and if they turn their backs on the values that sport stands for then we should turn our backs on them."