Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

AMRIT MATHUR

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While the IPL plays out in 60 matches across India, the MSK Prasad-led national selection committee gives the tournament a total miss. Instead, the country’s selectors follow India’s premier domestic tournament and the most competitiv­e cricket league in the world on television over dinner like the rest of us.

The IPL snub is bizarre considerin­g our normally high threshold of accepting the unusual. Selectors travel to all domestic matches, including the T20 Mushtaq Ali tournament, and accompany A-sides on away tours. So why not watch India’s young talent to judge their potential, technique and temperamen­t in a high pressure ‘live’ situation? Only a vague explanatio­n is available that this has been the standard practice since IPL began.

Giving IPL a miss is not the only odd thing about Indian cricket’s selection system. The Lodha Committee decided the BCCI needed three selectors not five, challengin­g logic on two counts.

First, the present arrangemen­t was working fine, why mess with it? India has 28 first-class sides, almost 1000 players so five selectors are not too many. Australia with six first-class teams has four selectors.

Secondly, shrinking the panel is flawed on principle itself. The Lodha panel categorica­lly said cricket matters are best left to cricketers yet the learned judges (certainly no cricket experts) decided to support this hugely technical call on selection.

The BCCI has made important changes to its selection process. Earlier, selectors were appointed by the BCCI working committee.

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