Captain Michael Clarke stressed today that no Australian teams he has played with have been involved in corruption, saying it was wrong for all cricketers to be tarred by match-fixing.
The International Cricket Council has a long-running investigation into the scourge, and reports emerged this week that New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum had been asked to fix games.
McCullum is not under investigation, but his evidence to the ICC's anti-corruption unit leaked to Britain's Daily Mail reveals he was approached by a "world renowned former cricketer" in 2008.
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"(X) said that the 'Big Boys' in international cricket were doing it and he didn't want me to miss out," the Mail reported him saying, with the first approach in Kolkata before the inaugural Indian Premier League and the second in England the same year.
Clarke said Australian players were taught from a young age about corruption and what to be on the look-out for in terms of approaches and knew the difference between right and wrong.
"I am extremely confident about the players that I've played with," he told reporters.
"For this Australian team, they all know very clearly that there's no room for corruption in our team. A big part of our job is to uphold the integrity of our sport and I think we do that well.
"I can only talk about Australian players, but in this country we are very well educated and I'm very happy, satisfied and confident that Australian players are making the right decisions.