During the third Test of the
1981 Ashes series, Australian players
Dennis Lillee and
Rod Marsh placed a bet on England to win the match after the odds had ballooned out to 500–1. Australia were widely expected to win the match with England at 135-7 after having been made to
follow-on. In a remarkable rear-guard effort, England did indeed win the match following brilliant performances from
Ian Botham and
Bob Willis, and Lillee and Marsh duly collected £7,500 (). There has never been any suggestion that the players deliberately underperformed to ensure their bet succeeded; nevertheless, the failure of cricket authorities to censure Lillee and Marsh at the time has led some to suggest that it contributed to the match-fixing scandals of the 1990s and 2000s. Another scandal was
Mark Waugh and
Shane Warne's payments from "
John the bookmaker" on a tour of Sri Lanka in 1994. The
ICC was slow to react, but did eventually in 2000 set up an
Anti-Corruption and Security Unit headed by Sir
Paul Condon, former head of London's
Metropolitan Police. It claims to have reduced corruption in cricket to a "reducible minimum". During the fourth Test of
2010 Pakistani tour of England,
News of the World published a story with allegations that
Mazhar Majeed and some of the Pakistani players were involved in
spot fixing. Pakistani players
Salman Butt,
Mohammad Asif and
Mohammad Amir were later jailed and banned from cricket. In 2013, three cricketers from New Zealand were approached by the ICC in regards to match fixing, later named as
Lou Vincent,
Chris Cairns and
Daryl Tuffey. In 2014, Vincent admitted to being involved in match fixing. == In popular culture ==