Ian Chappeli questions Beefy’s knighthood credentials
Sydney, Oct.24 : Former Australian captain and middle-order bat Ian Chappell has questioned the merits of Ian Botham's recent knighthood, reigniting a war of words with the English cricket great.
Chappell, who says he hasn't spoken to Botham since 1980, unleashed a withering attack on Beefy in today's edition of The Bulletin magazine.
It follows claims from Botham in his new autobiography that he "flattened" the former Australian captain in a Melbourne bar 30 years ago.
Chappell again dismisses Botham's recounting of the events of their much-told 1977 spat, before cautioning the Englishman, who was knighted by the Queen this month for his services to cricket and charity, about "peddling his lies".
"There are many skeletons dangling in Botham's cupboard, ranging from stories of drug-taking to general thuggery, and if he keeps peddling his lies, there's every chance more of these stories will emerge," Chappell wrote.
"As I said when asked about his recent trip to Buckingham Palace: 'Someone is going to regret awarding him a knighthood.' "
Botham's new book is titled Head On, but Chappell says it should instead be called "More Cricket Fairytales".
According to Botham's book, the '77 row started when the former Australian skipper started rubbishing English cricket in a bar.
"I gave him three official warnings," wrote Botham, "All of which he ignored, so the next time he started, I just flattened him.
"He went flying over a table and crash landed on a group of Aussie Rules footballers, spilling their drinks in the process."
According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Botham, who was in Australia on scholarship at the time playing for Melbourne University in the Victorian district competition, then went on to claim Chappell bolted for the door, with him in pursuit.
"Apart from having us in the same bar, the rest is a fairytale," Chappell wrote.
Instead, Chappell claimed the spat began when Botham accused the Australian of verbal abuse during a game between Australia and Somerset years before - a match that Chappell insists he never played.
After exchanging a few choice words, Chappell claimed: "He put an empty beer glass against my face and threatened: 'I'll cut you from ear to ear.'
"That will only confirm you are a coward,' I said ... I was leaning back in my chair at the time and, when he pushed me in the chest, I fell backwards.
"As I got up, he suggested we settle it outside to which I replied: 'I don’t fight. You either finish up in jail or hospital and I don't intend visiting either over a c--- like you.'
"I turned and headed outside where he yelled something about knocking my block off [on the cricket field] the next day.
"As I was walking across Wellington Street, I turned and replied: 'What, with your sore arm and all, Deary'?
"With that, he became enraged and the former Australian fast bowler Ian Callen had to restrain him by clutching him in a bear hug."
Chappell claimed Botham was once asked by a Australian cricket journalist who witnessed the event why he was spreading a version of the story that wasn't true, with Botham alleged to have replied: "Because it makes me look a big man in England." (ANI)