Dilbert wrote:So lets look at this event by event
1] KP criticises Nick Knight, is fined by ECB
Andersen criticises MV, no action taken.
Pietersen was already on a warning following his tweet about his exclusion from the ODI team. Accidental or not, he should have been more careful. Shouldn't have been fined though.
Anderson's comments have only just come out. Whilst I don't agree with player auto-biographies, at least he explain why he feels the way he does, arguably it is constructive criticism, rather than just made a crass comment on Twitter.
Dilbert wrote:2] KP texts something (no one still know what exactly it was, as Flower himself admitted he did not know the content) to his friends in SA team, he is banned
Swann calls Samit mediocre fat spinner and is let off
Swann says something less than complimentary about KP in his bio and thats just an honest opinion
Swann was disciplined internally. England wanted the whole texting situation to be sorted out internally but Pietersen dallied and refused to clarify when given the opportunity. If he had sorted it instead of mucking about with Morgan and his agents, less leaks may have occurred.
As mentioned by someone else, KP also called Samit "unfit and fat and lazy" and nothing came of it.
Dilbert wrote:3] KP accuses Broad, Swann and Andersen behind a parody twitter account. Subsequently that is owned up by some county player who is room mates with Broad. And half the Eng team follow the parody account within an hour of its creation. Circumstantial evidence, or rather for a person who is being parodied, this all points to his team mates ridiculing him. ECB ignores this.
KP texts something (no one still know what exactly it was, as Flower himself admitted he did not know the content) to his friends in SA team, he is banned. Now the ECB, Flower or anyone else did not have proof that this even happened. But KP was guilty until proven innocent. Also many posters dont acknowledge this as KPs honest opinion, when they feel that Swanns criticism of KPs captaincy was exactly that.
No evidence that Anderson, Swann or Broad were involved. Swann and Broad have both publicly denied knowledge - Broad via a statement, Swann via Twitter. Pietersen was given the option to do the same, i.e. put it in writing that he didn't send anything. He chose not to. If he had done so, he would have been trusted (or at least hope he would have).



Anyway there's nothing new that can be said about this subject.