Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Rangaswamy set to be part of BCCI apex council

- Sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

›A female voice in the BCCI was unthinkabl­e not so long ago. It is a massive step forward for women’s cricket. Thanks to Lodha reforms.

SHANTHA RANGASWAMY

NEWDELHI: Former India captain Shantha Rangaswamy is set to become a part of the all-powerful BCCI apex council as she is in line to be elected unopposed to the Indian Cricketers’ Associatio­n (ICA) to be constitute­d following polls starting on Friday.

In the final list of nominated candidates, Rangaswamy is the sole candidate for being the ICA representa­tive nominee to the nine-member BCCI apex council which was recommende­d by the Supreme Court-appointed Justice RM Lodha panel.

With the ICA president and its representa­tive nominee to the IPL Governing Council set to be elected unopposed, the main fight during the three-day election will be between former cricketers Kirti Azad and Anshuman Gaekwad to become the male representa­tive nominee to the BCCI Apex Council.

The third former cricketer in the fray is Saurashtra’s Rakesh Dhruve. Ashok Malhotra and Surender Khanna are set to be elected unopposed as ICA president and representa­tive nominee to IPL governing council respective­ly. As many as 1267 ICA members are eligible to vote in the online elections, the result of which will be known on Tuesday. The ICA, which gives players an official voice for the first time, came into being after the Lodha panel-recommende­d reforms in Indian cricket. The unsuccessf­ul attempts to form a players’ associatio­n were made in 1976 and 2001.

Rangaswamy, who played the game when women’s cricket was neglected and not recognised by the BCCI, said female representa­tion in the country’s cricket board is a giant leap for the sport.

“A female voice in the BCCI was unthinkabl­e not so long ago. It is a massive step forward for women’s cricket. Thanks to Lodha reforms which made it possible to storm the male bastion,” the 65-year-old, who was the first woman to lead an Indian cricket team, said.

Rangaswamy is also the first woman recipient of BCCI’s lifetime achievemen­t award and it was under her captaincy that India won a Test series for the first time. Her presence in the apex council means that BCCI will continue to have a powerful female representa­tive with another former captain Diana Edulji being part of the Committee of Administra­tors (CoA) running Indian cricket since January 2017.

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