News Sports Cricket Kevin Pietersen's book rocked cricket but dig a little deeper

Kevin Pietersen's book rocked cricket but dig a little deeper

Kevin Pietersen's autobiography seems to have an endless stream of sad score-settling.But while the former England batsman's claims of a bullying culture are certainly worthy of investigation, it's KP's mass of contradictions that leap off

Tempted by IPl riches

Pietersen has repeatedly said that he did not wish to prioritise the lucrative Indian Premier League at the expense of his England career, while espousing the IPL's virtues in his cricket development. He has always said that England was his main concern.

Yet he asked to fly to India to play in the IPL semi-finals right in the middle of back-to-back Tests against the West Indies at Lord's and Trent Bridge in 2012.

Dressing room tales

In a press conference at the start of the Ashes tour last summer, KP declared that the England camp was a place full of harmony, a united place. ‘We're all having so much fun. I think we'll stay friends after cricket,' he said. ‘We've all grown up and the environment now is absolutely fantastic — I'm not lying, I'm being dead straight.'

Yet in the book he says quite the opposite: ‘The dressing room had been awful for years. There were wins and star players, but the dressing room was sick all along.'