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Ankeet Chavan
Ankeet Chavan
from Wikipedia

Ankeet Chavan (born 28 October 1985) is a former cricketer who played for Mumbai in Indian domestic cricket.[1] He was an all-rounder who batted left-handed and bowled slow left-arm orthodox. He also played for Rajasthan Royals in Indian Premier League.[2]

Key Information

Spot fixing controversy

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On 16 May 2013, Delhi police arrested Chavan on spot-fixing charges during IPL 6 along with Ajit Chandila and Sreesanth, who played alongside him for Rajasthan Royals. According to police, Chavan was promised 6 million (US$71,000) to give away 14 runs in Rajasthan Royals' match against Mumbai Indians on 15 May 2013 and he gave away 15 runs in his second over.[3][4][5] After being arrested, he was immediately suspended by his employer, Air India.[6] He has been suspended from his cricketing career. Having been put in judicial custody in Tihar Central Jail, New Delhi, Chavan was granted bail from 31 May to 6 June to solemnise his marriage which had been fixed for 2 June 2013 and was granted bail on 10 June 2013 along with the other accused.[7][8] On 13 September 2013, Chavan and fellow player Sreesanth were banned from cricket for life by the BCCI disciplinary committee .[9] On 25 July 2015, the Delhi Court gave a clean chit and discharged him of all the charges in the IPL spot fixing case.

On 16 June 2021, BCCI lifted ban on Ankeet Chavan and now he's allowed to play cricket.[10]

References

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from Grokipedia
Ankeet Chavan (born 28 October 1985) is an Indian former cricketer and current coach, known for his role as a left-arm orthodox spinner and lower-order left-handed batsman who represented in domestic competitions and in the (IPL). Chavan debuted in for during the 2008–09 season, progressing from maidans cricket in to become a reliable . He played 18 first-class matches, taking wickets as Mumbai's primary spinner during their 40th title win in the 2012–13 season, where he claimed 33 wickets overall in that campaign. In limited-overs formats, he featured in 20 List A games and 13 IPL matches for between 2011 and 2013, contributing as a bowling . His career was overshadowed by involvement in the 2013 IPL spot-fixing scandal, alongside teammates and , leading to his arrest and a lifetime ban from the Board of Control for in India (BCCI). The ban was later lifted, and in June 2021, the BCCI formally cleared him to resume competitive . Post-retirement, Chavan transitioned to coaching, securing the role of Mumbai Under-14 coach in July 2025 while offering batting tips against spin on social media.

Early life

Background and entry into cricket

Ankeet Chavan was born on 28 October 1985 in , , into a middle-class Maharashtrian family residing in the City Light area of . Raised in a cultured household that encouraged his sporting interests, Chavan began playing informally in the local by-lanes and club circuits of , honing his abilities as a left-arm spinner through exposure rather than formal academies. His progression into organized cricket occurred via Mumbai's domestic age-group structure, where he secured selection for youth teams, including the Under-19 side, marking his entry into structured training and competitive development pathways focused on local talent nurturing.

Domestic career

Debut and notable performances

Chavan made his List A debut for Mumbai in the against Baroda on February 27, 2008, at , contributing as a slow left-arm orthodox bowler in the team's spin attack. His first-class debut came later that year in the against Orissa from December 12 to 14, 2008, at , where he began establishing himself as a domestic spinner for the side. In subsequent seasons, Chavan's bowling gained prominence, particularly after his first full campaign in 2011-12. A standout performance occurred in the 2012-13 against , where he claimed 9 wickets for 23 runs, dismantling their innings for just 59 and demonstrating his control and variations as Mumbai's primary left-arm spinner ahead of options like . This spell highlighted his role in restricting rivals through economical orthodox spin on turning pitches.

Achievements in Mumbai cricket

Chavan debuted in for in the 2007–08 Super League, taking wickets in his initial seasons and establishing himself as a left-arm orthodox spinner capable of exploiting turning pitches. By the 2012–13 season, he had become 's primary spinner, surpassing in the team's hierarchy through consistent domestic performances. His standout achievement came in the 2012–13 Ranji Trophy group stage match against Punjab on December 11, 2012, where he recorded match figures of 12 for 165, including a second-innings haul of 9 for 23—the third-best bowling figures in Ranji Trophy history. This performance triggered a Punjab collapse to 59 all out, nearly securing a Mumbai victory and highlighting Chavan's ability to dismantle batting lineups on helpful tracks. Chavan played a pivotal role in Mumbai's 40th title win in the 2012–13 season, capturing 33 wickets across the campaign as the team's leading spinner and contributing to their successful playoff run, including victories in the semi-final and final. Over his domestic career with , spanning 18 first-class matches, he amassed 53 wickets at an average of 36.43, with one and multiple four-wicket underscoring his reliability in the spin department for the side.

IPL involvement

Auction selection and role

Ankeet Chavan was signed by the Rajasthan Royals ahead of the 2011 Indian Premier League season, marking his entry into the franchise's squad as a domestic player following his association with the Mumbai Indians' setup in the league's inaugural year. This acquisition reflected the Royals' strategy of bolstering their spin bowling options with cost-effective Indian talent, amid a roster that included high-profile overseas spinners. Primarily utilized as a left-arm orthodox spinner, Chavan was earmarked for middle-overs containment, leveraging his domestic experience in matches to apply pressure on batsmen during the phase requiring run restriction and wicket-taking opportunities. His role contrasted with the explosive contributions expected from overseas stars like , emphasizing economical bowling to support the team's balanced attack under captain . In the lead-up to the 2013 season, Chavan gained limited but foundational IPL exposure through appearances in the 2011 and 2012 campaigns for the Royals, allowing gradual assimilation into team tactics focused on disciplined spin variations on Indian pitches. These outings, totaling fewer than a dozen matches across the two years, honed his utility as a reliable domestic option for rotational depth in spin-heavy lineups.

Performances in 2013 season

In the early part of the 2013 IPL season, Ankeet Chavan, a slow left-arm orthodox spinner, appeared in two matches for , bowling a total of seven overs and conceding 38 runs while taking one , for an economy rate of approximately 5.43. On April 17 against in , he bowled three overs without conceding a , allowing just 10 runs and demonstrating control with an economy of 3.33, relying on his variations to restrict scoring in the middle overs. Chavan's next outing came on May 3 versus , where he bowled four overs, claimed one wicket, but leaked 28 runs at an economy of 7.00, reflecting the challenges of adapting his domestic accuracy to T20 pressures such as quicker batsmen and shorter boundaries. This mixed form contrasted with his stronger domestic showing in the 2012-13 , where he led Mumbai's spin attack with consistent wicket-taking ability, underscoring the empirical gap between first-class containment and IPL's high-scoring demands without implying any extraneous factors. His early-season contributions highlighted potential in economical spells but limited impact overall, as Royals prioritized pace in several fixtures amid a competitive unit.

2013 spot-fixing scandal

Nature of allegations

Ankeet Chavan faced allegations of in the match between and on May 15, 2013, at in , where he was purportedly paid ₹60 to underperform in a specific session or over during his bowling stint. The claimed Chavan agreed to deliberately concede runs as part of a prearranged outcome to favor betting syndicates, aligning with broader accusations against players who fixed isolated elements of games for financial gain from bookmakers. These claims positioned Chavan within a larger betting network involving co-accused teammates and , who, according to police statements, confessed to similar manipulations in separate matches—Sreesanth for conceding excessive runs signaled through gestures, and Chandila for fixing an over to yield 14 runs. The alleged syndicate extended to bookies and intermediaries with ties to figures, coordinating fixes on outcomes like run totals in targeted overs to exploit session betting markets. Prosecution evidence centered on Chavan's purported during custody, where police sources stated he admitted to the error of involvement for monetary incentives, supplemented by video footage purportedly showing unnatural patterns indicative of intentional leniency, and intercepted phone communications linking him to betting operatives. These elements were presented as corroborating a pattern of where players received coded instructions to deliver predictable results, such as 14-15 runs in a designated over, without affecting the overall match outcome.

Key events and evidence presented

Delhi Police initiated investigations into an underground betting syndicate following intelligence on illegal wagering during IPL matches, culminating in sting operations that ensnared bookies predicting specific on-field irregularities. On May 15, 2013, during Rajasthan Royals' match against Mumbai Indians at Wankhede Stadium, anomalies emerged in the 20th over bowled by Ankeet Chavan, where he conceded 13 runs—including a wide and no-ball—prompting immediate scrutiny as bookies had allegedly forecasted such deviations for spot-fixing purposes. This followed similar irregularities in prior fixtures, such as Ajit Chandila's deliberate no-balls against Royal Challengers Bangalore on May 9 and Sreesanth's boundary concessions against Kings XI Punjab on May 12, indicating a pattern affecting multiple IPL games orchestrated by the syndicate. Post-match on May 16, 2013, Delhi Police arrested Chavan, Sreesanth, and Chandila in Mumbai, alongside 11 bookies, seizing evidence including mobile phone recordings of syndicate communications predicting no-balls and run concessions with precise timings. Prosecutors presented forensic trails linking players to bookies via call data records and financial transactions, claiming Chavan received payments for manipulating the final over's outcome to align with betting odds. During initial interrogations, police reported Chavan breaking down and admitting involvement, detailing his "mistake" in conceding runs on cue, which they positioned as corroborating the syndicate's scale spanning several fixtures. Defenses countered with allegations of investigative overreach, asserting confessions were extracted under duress without independent verification, as bookies later claimed invalidated statements. Lawyers argued the absence of direct video or eyewitness proof tying Chavan to bookie instructions undermined the , portraying the and run anomalies as interpretive rather than intentionally fixed, while questioning the reliability of sting-derived predictions amid potential . Police rebutted coercion claims, emphasizing voluntary disclosures aligned with seized communication logs demonstrating syndicate coordination across matches.

Arrest, charges, and trial process

On May 16, 2013, Ankeet Chavan was arrested in by the Special Cell, alongside teammates and , following allegations of in IPL matches played earlier that season. The operation, conducted outside the team's hotel after a match against , involved invoking criminal provisions despite the arrests occurring in , as the alleged betting syndicate operated from . Chavan and the others were formally charged under Sections 420 (cheating) and 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the , with additional invocation of the Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) to address the structured betting network. pursued the case under these statutes, emphasizing the elements, while the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) contested the police's primacy, advocating for resolution through its internal anti-corruption mechanisms rather than criminal jurisdiction. This led to procedural frictions, including BCCI's initial suspension of the players pending its own inquiry, separate from police actions. The trial process encountered delays stemming from jurisdictional disputes, the compilation of a voluminous chargesheet by Delhi Police, and the recording of witness statements, such as those from teammates under Section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Hearings in a Patiala House court in Delhi extended through 2014 and into 2015, complicated by challenges to MCOCA's applicability across state lines and the need to examine multiple stakeholders, including bookies and undercover informants. Chavan received interim bail in late May 2013 for personal reasons but faced ongoing custody and surrender requirements amid these procedural hurdles.

Court verdict and acquittal

On July 25, 2015, the Patiala House in Delhi discharged Ankeet Chavan, , and from all criminal charges in the 2013 IPL case, ruling that the prosecution had failed to establish a case sufficient for framing charges or proceeding to . The specifically noted the absence of linking the players to betting syndicates or acts, including no recovery of alleged illicit payments and reliance on circumstantial indicators like bowling speeds that did not conclusively prove . Central to the judicial reasoning was the invalidation of statements, which the accused retracted and claimed were extracted under duress during high-profile arrests, lacking independent corroboration as required under Indian evidence law. Procedural lapses further undermined the case, such as the improper invocation of the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) without demonstrating the players' integration into an organized criminal network beyond unsubstantiated bookie associations. The benefit of doubt was thus extended, emphasizing that statistical anomalies in performances alone could not sustain charges of cheating under IPC sections 420 and 120B or related provisions. The verdict eliminated criminal liability for Chavan and his co-accused, distinguishing judicial outcomes from parallel administrative probes in , though it fueled public debate on evidentiary standards in high-stakes cases. Supporters of the ruling defended it as a check against overzealous policing reliant on media-driven narratives and coerced testimonies, while detractors, including investigating authorities, critiqued it as overly lenient, arguing that overlooked circumstantial links risked undermining anti- efforts in s.

BCCI sanctions and appeals

Initial lifetime ban

On September 13, 2013, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) imposed a lifetime ban on Ankeet Chavan through its disciplinary committee, following an internal into allegations during the (IPL) season. The , headed by Ravi Sawani, former head of the Council's Anti-Corruption and Security Unit, examined evidence from investigations, including audio recordings, witness statements, and initial player confessions linking Chavan to deliberate no-balls in matches against on May 12 and Kings XI Punjab on May 13. The committee's rationale centered on Chavan's violation of the BCCI's , which mandates players to safeguard the game's integrity by rejecting corrupt approaches and reporting them promptly; instead, evidence indicated Chavan's active participation in pre-arranged actions for financial gain from bookies, undermining competitive fairness. This disciplinary action prioritized and public trust in the sport over the threshold for criminal conviction, as the BCCI operates under its own regulatory framework distinct from judicial processes. The ban suspended Chavan from all forms of representative cricket, including domestic tournaments like the , and prohibited any association with BCCI or its affiliates, effectively curtailing his career as a Mumbai left-arm spinner who had debuted in first-class cricket in 2012. Identical lifetime bans were applied to Rajasthan Royals teammates and for comparable involvement, while squad member Amit Singh received a five-year ban after cooperating with investigators.

Reduction, lifting, and rationale

In June 2021, the BCCI reduced Ankeet Chavan's lifetime ban, imposed in 2013 for involvement in IPL , to a seven-year term applied retrospectively from September 13, 2013, thereby permitting him to resume professional after the period's expiry. The formal clearance was communicated on June 15, 2021, following acceptance of the BCCI Ombudsman's recommendation. The reduction stemmed from a March 3, 2021, directive by the Bombay High Court referring Chavan's plea to Ombudsman D.K. Jain, who determined the lifetime sanction disproportionate in light of his 2015 acquittal by the Patiala House Court and precedents in co-accused cases. This aligned with Supreme Court guidance in S. Sreesanth's appeal, emphasizing proportionate penalties over blanket lifetime exclusions absent conclusive criminal guilt, as applied to other 2013 spot-fixing participants like Ajit Chandila, whose ban was similarly shortened to seven years. Chavan had petitioned the BCCI in November 2019 for this adjustment, citing his acquittal and requesting parity with reduced sanctions for peers. BCCI officials underscored the decision's adherence to judicial proportionality while upholding protocols, noting the original ban's basis in disciplinary findings despite the criminal . However, the move drew scrutiny for potentially eroding deterrence, with observers highlighting variances in —such as Sreesanth's full reinstatement—over uniform lifetime penalties for breaches, though Chavan's lesser profile and in probes were informally factored in rehabilitation assessments.

Post-sanction activities

Return to competitive

Following the reduction of his lifetime ban to seven years, the Board of Control for in India (BCCI) formally cleared Ankeet Chavan on June 16, 2021, to resume professional , including participation in domestic leagues and tournaments under its jurisdiction. This revocation enabled eligibility for structured competitive play after the ban's effective end in September 2020. Chavan, then aged 35, immediately pursued re-entry by planning to request permission from the (MCA) to participate in local matches, stating his intent to return to the field and confidence in his ability to compete. He emphasized a commitment to playing for at least the next five years, highlighting retained skills from his prior 18 first-class appearances where he took 45 wickets at an average of 32.57. No records indicate successful participation in BCCI-sanctioned domestic or lower-tier competitive matches post-clearance, with available reports focusing instead on his expressed aspirations rather than verified on-field activity.

Coaching appointment and current role

In July 2025, the Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) appointed Ankeet Chavan as head coach of its Under-14 boys' team, shortly after the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) fully lifted his prior sanctions related to the 2013 IPL spot-fixing case. This marked Chavan's return to an official coaching role in domestic cricket, leveraging his background as a former left-arm spinner to guide emerging talent. Chavan's responsibilities include player selection, training sessions emphasizing technical skills such as variations, and overall youth development programs under MCA's age-group structure, with the team competing in inter-state tournaments like the BCCI Under-14 National Championships. The appointment followed MCA's annual coaching revamp, where Chavan was selected over other candidates based on his domestic playing credentials and post-ban eligibility. Public and cricketing reactions to the role have been polarized: proponents argue it aligns with principles of rehabilitation after judicial and sanction compliance, enabling Chavan to contribute expertise without ongoing restrictions, while detractors highlight risks of his spot-fixing association—despite legal clearance—potentially undermining ethical standards for minors. As of October 2025, Chavan remains in the position, with no reported changes or further BCCI interventions.

References

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