I bet 100 to 1 that nobody including cricketers, curators, groundsman and least the media persons can predict even 50% of how the wicket will behave during a T20, ODI and Test match, unless of course the pitch has been watered few hours earlier as was done at Hirabaag in Pune about a decade or more ago. So to 'create' a pitch to 'suit' anybody is a big myth in itslef. When there is no guarantee of what you are offering, to help the bookies with ground reality is out of question. It is one thing when players cheat as living beings. Ground is 'dead' ,Man!