Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Interpreta­tion of new BCCI constituti­on will be critical

- BEYOND THE NEWS

The formation of an Apex Council, stringent rules on conflict of interest and the formation of a players’ associatio­n are part of the new BCCI constituti­on that was registered on Tuesday with the Registrar of Societies of Tamil Nadu in Chennai. This sets the ball rolling for the state associatio­ns to adopt the new constituti­on in the next four weeks and then prepare for the elections.

The new Memorandum of Associatio­n and rules and regulation­s are the result of a Supreme Court order delivered on August 9. A three-judge bench had deliberate­d for more than 30 months after former CJI RM Lodha revealed a slew of recommenda­tions aimed at reforming the prosperous but seemingly ill-governed BCCI on January 4, 2016.

The new 99-page constituti­on is diluted version of the proposals the Lodha committee had made and the Supreme Court had signed off on July 18, 2016.

The Lodha committee recommende­d strict rules on membership and voting rights, age and tenure. The new constituti­on is hardly ‘new’. As opposed to Lodha’s one-state-one-vote, the new constituti­on accommodat­es Maharashtr­a and Gujarat, who will have multiple units with full voting rights. The modified tenure to hold a post is much ‘cooler’ than what Lodha said.

The institutio­nal units like Services, Universiti­es and the Railways have also retained their voting rights. The only tweak is that a former cricketer will be eligible to vote.

The interpreta­tion of the clauses in the new rulebook will be crucial. The several rules on conflict of interest, the definition of a person “holding a public office” and someone “charged by court of law for any criminal offence” may scupper the desire of several high-profile officials seeking a position in the BCCI.

The formation of a nine-member Apex Council – it was part of Lodha’s proposals — will garner a lot of limelight in the new scheme of things. The principal body of the BCCI, the Council has to include two members from the players’ associatio­n and one of them has to be a woman.

Players associatio­ns have been a failure in India. Multiple associatio­ns, including one led by a famous Indian all-rounder and an opening batsman, have failed to function for lack of unity and transparen­cy. How this will be addressed by the BCCI will be interestin­g to see.

The ‘Indianisat­ion’ of cricket is one of the best things of this constituti­on. The North-east will emerge as a big vote bank and those aspiring to be office-bearers will have to run that extra mile to woo voters.

Bihar’s re-admission into the mainstream is good news for a state that has faced the brunt of factionali­sm and subsequent split (into Jharkhand). Vinod Rai’s Committee of Administra­tors is yet to fix Bihar’s internal cricket politics. The appointmen­t of an adhoc committee may have settled the Bihar issue.

At least the new constituti­on will end the long innings of ‘acting’ BCCI officials in perennial animosity with Rai’s committee that is fronted by the CEO.

A new ‘chapter’ in Indian cricket lurks and it could not have been better timed with the good turn of events at Nottingham. JAKARTA: Promised a beach party on Wednesday, the India women’s hockey team got into the mood a day prior, beating Kazakhstan 21-0 in a Pool B league match of the Asian Games.

The Asia Cup champions didn’t miss skipper Rani Rampal on way to scripting the second best score in the Games’ history. Not since India beating Hong Kong 22-0 in the 1982 Asian Games has a team notched up a win this facile.

How wide the chasm was between India and their opponents could be gauged by the 7-1 win when they last met, in the 2017 Asia Cup.

GURJIT SHINES

That gap seemed to have got wider as India scored at regular intervals after taking seven minutes to open their account.that happened when Gurjit Kaur converted team’s third penalty corner with a quick push.

Thereafter, it was raining goals. Gurjit got three more (36’ penalty stroke, 44’ and 52’).

Lalremsiam­i (9’, 19’, 30’), Navneet

COACH HAPPY

“Yes, we are in a celebratio­n mode and will be having a beach party tomorrow,” said India coach Sjoerd Marijne after the match.

“There was no scoreline we had in our minds; we just wanted to play good hockey. For me, the number doesn’t matter, how we play does.”

“Since we are the Asia champions, we should play like champions and I am happy that the girls did what I was expecting them to do today.

Their passing was good and I am sure this win would help them prepare well for the match against Korea on Saturday.”

Marijne said that after a day’s celebratio­n, the team would get down to the training as the match against Korea would be tough. “We need to work hard so practice sessions are slated on Thursday and Friday.”

Skipper Rani said: “I didn’t play today as I have a minor glutes (muscles that form the buttock) injury.

I will be fit to play against Korea. We are excited to celebrate the win at the party as a break was much needed.”

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