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Analysis

No remorse, no return

Maurice Odumbe is too old to get back on the cricket field and is a poor role model off it

Maurice Odumbe arrives for his hearing at a Nairobi hotel, May 19, 2004

What is certain is that even contemplating the return of Maurice Odumbe would be about as backward a step as it would be possible to take  •  AFP

Maurice Odumbe's campaign to rekindle his cricket career now that his five-year ban for associating with a known bookmaker is over continues to gather pace, aided by sympathetic local media coverage and a reputation forged at the 2003 World Cup.
Listening to Odumbe talk about the role he still has to play in the game, it is easy to forget how someone who was an idol to a generation of young Kenyan cricketers threw it all away for some easy cash.
Odumbe is keen to portray himself as someone who was badly wronged, who was stitched up by a disgruntled wife, by a spurned girlfriend and by those jealous of him. He has never shown any remorse, and as recently as this month continued to refuse to accept he did anything wrong. "I have forgiven the people who made me suffer," he said. Still sinned against rather than sinner.
With that in mind, it's worth recalling what Justice Ahmed Ebrahim said at the end of the ICC hearing in 2004.
"Far from shouldering this responsibility, Odumbe has shown himself to be dishonest and devious in his behaviour in relation to the game of cricket. He has been callous and greedy in the way he has conducted himself. There is no suggestion that he was in desperate straits and in dire need of money because of some serious difficulty which may have befallen him. The evidence, if anything, shows him living a lifestyle of pleasure and irresponsibility.
Far from taking heed of the warnings of the dire consequences which would follow such behaviour ... Odumbe chose to thumb his nose at [the ICC] and continued his dishonest ways. He has exhibited no remorse. He has not indicated any intention to mend his ways. Instead he has chosen to cast doubts on the honesty and integrity of people who have despaired of his behaviour."
It is also worth noting that Odumbe chose to stay silent at the hearing, so the only questioning he has faced about his conduct has come in the friendly local media.
What is certain is that even contemplating the return of Odumbe would be about as backward a step as it would be possible to take. On the field he is too old - he is 40 - and until this month hadn't picked up a bat in anger in five years. Off it, he has proved a deeply-flawed role model.
Even if he were five years younger and worth a place in the side, Cricket Kenya should refuse to have anything to do with him. By his conduct at the hearing and his lack of any remorse for, or even acceptance of, what he did in the five years since, he shouldn't be allowed back.
If he were, then he would tarnish his team-mates and international cricket by association, and it would send out all the wrong signals in a game which has done so much to clean up its act.
The world has moved on. Odumbe needs to.

Martin Williamson is executive editor of Cricinfo and managing editor of ESPN Digital Media in Europe, the Middle East and Africa