Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

First-class players must get annual retainers now

- AMRIT MATHUR

As another long domestic season comes to a close the BCCI is set to hold its annual debrief exercise -the meeting with Ranji captains and coaches. This consultati­ve engagement will bring into focus important issues that need attention. In such meetings some players hesitate to speak up while others have nothing to say or are unable to express themselves. But coaches like Chandrakan­t Pandit, Bhaskar Pillai, Dav Whatmore, Vikram Rathore, Sitanshu Kotak know their stuff and are not shy of playing on the front foot.

For India to do well -- in Tests, especially overseas --- domestic cricket must be carefully shaped. Instead of support, domestic cricket this season has got quite a hammering. First, the schedule was unduly delayed which affected team preparatio­n. Then started a bizarre sequence where every major tournament was tinkered with. Ranji Trophy returned to home and away structure, Duleep Trophy was scrapped before being restored, the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy was reschedule­d and the Vijay Hazare restructur­ed.

Considerin­g this, the first message from captains and coaches should be to stop this treatment. What is the point of six months of hard grind if Mayank Agarwal (2000 runs,1160 in Ranji with five hundreds from eight games and a highest score of 394) is only in the ‘queue’ for India selection? Faiz Fazal and RR Sanjay, the second and third highest run getters, are not even in the frame. And

Why should Jalaj Saxena, the highest wicket taker in Ranji Trophy (44 wickets from seven games), play domestic cricket when he is not in Deodhar Trophy, Duleep Trophy, Irani Cup or the IPL?

Compare this with rising under-19 star Kamlesh Nagarkoti who is yet to play Ranji Trophy but is already a recipient of multiple cash awards from the BCCI and Rajasthan government and a multi-crore IPL contract. The message around the domestic circuit is focus on IPL, Ranji Trophy is a waste of time.

To change this, domestic cricketers should be rewarded and their achievemen­ts celebrated. Indian cricket’s vast wealth has benefitted the BCCI, state associatio­ns and only a handful of top stars. IPL’s riches have bypassed first-class players and with shrinking job opportunit­ies, most are in financial distress.

Without state contracts, players live on match fees, which again is subject to selection. Worse, BCCI is yet to clear payments for the season before this. For lasting reform, three steps are required --- annual retainer contracts for first-class players, higher match fees to be paid upfront and cash bonus equal to the lowest grade BCCI annual contracts for top ten Ranji batsmen/bowlers. COLOMBO: Before the start of the Nidahas Trophy, all the talk was on India being favorites despite resting some of their key players. After the five-wicket loss to Sri Lanka in the opening game, this tournament could well turn out to be an open one.

The hosts exposed the frailties of the inexperien­ced Indian side, both in batting and bowling. Shikhar Dhawan was batting on a different surface while the rest of the batting stumbled. In the bowling, Yuzvendra Chahal once again picked up wickets but the rest of the bowlers suffered thanks to Kusal Perera’s 66 off 37 balls. Ahead of the second game against Bangladesh at the R Premadasa stadium on Thursday, skipper Rohit Sharma will be hoping to avoid a slip-up.

Although the team did not sound too worried after the loss against Sri Lanka, Rohit has some issues. The captain is currently undergoing a lean patch. Ever since his 118 against Sri Lanka in Indore, he has managed scores of 27,21,0,11,0. The middle order and lower-middle order struggled to maintain momentum and land the finishing blow. Manish Pandey scored 37 but consumed 35 balls. Rishabh Pant hit 23 but took same number of balls.

What will worry Rohit was the ineffectiv­eness of the pacers. Shardul Thakur and Jaydev Unadkat were low on confidence following Perera’s blitz in the Powerplay while Vijay Shankar

IPL RICHES HAVE BYPASSED FIRSTCLASS PLAYERS AND WITH SHRINKING JOB OPPORTUNIT­IES, MOST ARE IN FINANCIAL DISTRESS. DOMESTIC CRICKETERS SHOULD BE REWARDED.

 ?? BCCI ?? ▪ Jalaj Saxena (left) was the highest wicket taker in this Ranji Trophy but he doesn’t have an IPL contract.
BCCI ▪ Jalaj Saxena (left) was the highest wicket taker in this Ranji Trophy but he doesn’t have an IPL contract.
 ?? STRAIGHT D ??
STRAIGHT D

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