Dilpreet Bajwa, Canada’s T20 World Cup 2026 captain, is under investigation by the International Cricket Council's Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) over suspected corruption during a match against New Zealand.Bajwa, a 24-year-old cricketer born in Batala in Punjab, is under investigation over alleged suspicious activity during the 2026 T20 World Cup.What triggered the investigationThe ACU is examining events from a T20 World Cup 2026 match between Canada and New Zealand.What is under scrutinyDate: February 17, 2026Match against New Zealand chasing 174, at 35/2Unexpected move: Bajwa (primarily a batter) brought himself on to bowlThe over in questionFirst ball: No-ballAnother delivery: Wide down leg sideTotal conceded: 15 runsIndividually, these things happen in cricket. What raises eyebrows is the combinationUnusual bowling decisionErrors early in the over (no-ball + wide)Timing during a crucial phase of the matchWhy this looks suspicious (from an ACU perspective)The ACU doesn’t investigate bad performance, it looks for patterns consistent with manipulation.Here’s what may have triggered concernDeliberate extras (no-ball/wide) can be used in spot-fixingNon-regular bowler stepping in suddenlyMatch situation where small actions can influence betting marketsA documentary by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation titled 'Corruption, Crime and Cricket' (April 17, 2026) added fuel to the situation, alleging:Possible external influence on team selectionQuestions about Bajwa’s rapid appointment as captainThese claims are not proven, but they widen the scope of scrutiny beyond just one over.Performance context (why it matters—but isn’t proof)Tournament stats: 60 runs, 1 wicketCanada lost that match easilyPoor form alone is normal in sport. But when it is paired with:Odd tactical decisionsSpecific questionable deliveriesWhat the ACU will actually checkThe ICC’s Anti-Corruption Unit typically looks at:Betting market patternsPhone and communication recordsMatch footage analysisLinks to known corrupt networksWhere things stand right nowNo charges filedNo guilt establishedInvestigation is ongoingAt this stage, Bajwa is under scrutiny, not convicted.Who is BajwaOriginally from Batala in Gurdaspur, Bajwa moved to Canada after failing to break into the Punjab domestic circuit.He gained recognition in the Global T20 Canada league, becoming the first Canadian to score a century in the tournament while playing for the Montreal Tigers.In January 2026, he was named captain of Canada’s national team, making history as the first turban-wearing Sikh cricketer to lead the side.Prior to the controversy, Bajwa had spoken about the challenges faced by associate cricketing nations, emphasising the need for greater opportunities and exposure rather than sympathy.
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