Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Dalmiya best administra­tor: Kapil

- Dhiman Sarkar n sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: It was fitting that a metaphoric­al toast would be raised to Jagmohan Dalmiya at the Taj Bengal hotel. Not far from his home, this was the scene of Dalmiya’s triumphs and also the longest, most lonely walk of his life when he lost control of the Indian cricket board.

The evening began with Thilanga Sumathipal­a, the Sri Lankan board chief, praising D ail mi ya’ sn ego tia ti on skills and ended withKapil Dev calling him his hero and sport’ s best administra­tor in 50 years.

It is difficult to encapsulat­e the storied life of am an who changed the economics of cricket for India and the world in two speeches but Sumathipal­a and Kapil can’t be faulted for not trying at the first Jag mo han Dal mi ya Annual Conclave organised by the Cricket Associatio­n of Bengal.

Sumathipal­a’s anecdotes about“Jaggu” took the audience back to the days of PILCOM (the three-country committee formed for the 1996 World Cup). Stating that he needed special permission to leave the country because the budget session is on, Sumathipal a, who is the deputy speaker of the Sri Lankan Parliament, recalled how Dalmiya got an India-Pakistan team to play in Sri Lanka and show the world that life does goon evendays after the country’s central bank is bombed.

With Mo ham med Az ha rudd in in the room, Sum at hip ala, who is also the only surviving P IL COM director, narrated how “in five minutes” ‘Jaggu’ also solved the problem of getting‘ Azza’ tol eada team that had Wasim Akram.

“He called up Intikhab Alam and said being manager of such a team is the most important thing and got him to agree that Akram would play under Azza,” said Sumathipal­a, 53. “I think he was born as a negotiator…one who had the knack of getting everyone under one roof,” he said.

For someone who didn’ t make a good first impression on him, it was a measure of how much Dalmi ya grew on India’ s greatest allrounder thatKa pi l’ s tribute was studded by applause from the packed house that included the India and Sri Lanka teams.

“If cricketers have a good life now, it is because of him... I think he is the best administra­tor in sport in the last 50 years ,” said the man for whom Eden once chorused ‘No Kapil, no Test.’

“When we were playing, we would look at the wages of English and Australian cricketers and wonder when we would manage to come close. In 20 years, they are the ones looking to earn like Indians. The credit for this goes to my hero,” said Kapil, 58.

“Dalmiya wasn’t the best of speakers but knew how to write a contract. He was the first board official who sought a dialogue with the players. Before that, there were only orders. The1980s batch of Indian cricketers would remain grateful to him for that,” said Kapil.

If Sumathipal­a ended by batting for unity in Asian cricket boards because only then would the game benefit, Kapil, after praising Virat Kohl if or“bringing about a big change in fitness ”, asked the India captain to take the team to where it has never gone. Taken together, that is exactly what Dalmiya would have wanted.

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