To keep alive the memories of Bob Woolmer, who died tragically during 2007 World Cup, many memorial services have been planned at different churches.
The way in which the Pak coach was murdered has led the Jamaican police to believe that the killer came from outside the Caribbean country.
Eshan Qureshi has decided to take legal action against the BBC for inferring his role in the Pakistani coach's murder.
The Jamaican Police might have closed the Bob Woolmer chapter, concluding the death as natural, but Indian-born pathologist Dr Ere Seshaiah stands by his medical examination.
Dismissing possibilities of match-fixing, Jamaican police said three foreign pathologists and toxicology tests had ruled out foul play in Woolmer's death.
The Jamaican Police Deputy Commissioner said he was convinced that the 58-year-old former England player had no enemies who would want to kill him.
Jamaican Police Deputy Commissioner Mark Shields, who led the probe into the death of former Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer, has been gagged.
Former Pakistan players paid tribute to coach Bob Woolmer, whose tragic death during ODI World Cup in WI had left everybody stunned.
Although willing to aid the planned Bob Woolmer Academy in every possible way, some officials of PCB feel the late coach's family is being too demanding by asking for a special charity match.
The Bob Woolmer controversy refuses to die down with Jamaican Police now claiming to have received some new information regarding the Pakistan cricket coach's mysterious death.
Toxicology results of Bob Woolmer's tests have shown the presence of a foreign chemical substance in his body.
Since Woolmer's body was found in his hotel room on March 18, Shields has consistently made announcements and given interviews on the case.
Bob Woolmer's wife Gill rubbished the stories being spread across the Internet that her husband was murdered in the West Indies during 2007 World Cup.
The modus operandi of Woolmer's murderer has convinced the police that the killer came from outside the Caribbean country. Bob's strangulation led the police to reach to this conclusion.
A 'fatwah' angle emerged in the mysterious murder of Bob Woolmer with the disclosure that the Pakistan coach was unhappy with the time spent by the players on prayers.
NEW DELHI: Bob Woolmer is mainly credited with revolutionising cricket coaching with his novel use of technology.
The body of murdered Pakistan cricket coach Bob Woolmer has been released by Coroner Patrick Murphy and will soon be returned to his family in South Africa.
According to a Jamaican website, the police claim to have received some new information regarding Woolmer's mystery death and would soon go public with it.
Pakistan has expressed its inability to play a Twenty20 match against India to raise funds for their former coach Bob Woolmer's cricket academy in SA.
Richard Done, one of the three former Australian players vying for the job of Pakistan cricket coach, has arrived in Islamabad for an interview.
Bob Woolmer's widow Gill is losing patience with non-stop speculation even more than a month after the mysterious death of the Pakistan coach.
Jamaican police, according to Times Now, have said Pakistan players would be questioned about there whereabouts during the period
Pak scribe Ehsan Qureshi had sued the broadcaster for airing a programme in which he was shown in talks with Woolmer at a social event two days before the coach died.
The matter of Woolmer's death is now being treated as a case of murder as the pathologist report states that it was a result of manual strangulation.
Former Pakistan foreign coach Bob Woolmer may no longer be in this world but some of the players still have happy memories of the times spent with him.
Dav Whatmore has been issued a visit visa by the Pakistan embassy in Canberra, clearing the way for his scheduled visit to Lahore this month to finalise his contractual terms with the Pakistan Cricket Board.
he Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is apparently impressed with Steve Rixon's stint as New Zealand's coach in the late 1990s, putting the former Australian wicketkeeper in the running to coach Pakistan.
A day after the Jamaican police concluded that Woolmer's death was natural and that it was closing the case, Seshaiah stuck to his finding that the Pakistan cricket coach was murdered.
As the Pakistan captain walked to the plane, a Daily Mail correspondent asked him point blank: ‘‘Did you kill Bob Woolmer?"