Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Indian board crisis leaves fans in lurch

- AMRIT MATHUR

A HELPLESS COA IS SEEKING INSTRUCTIO­NS FROM THE SC BUT IN TRUE

When the Supreme Court stepped in to fix cricket, following controvers­ies ranging from conflict of interest, corruption to betting scandals, some questioned the need for judicial interventi­on.

India, they argued, has millions of societies like the BCCI and thousands (perhaps more) of these are in a bigger mess. The BCCI is better run than other sporting bodies so why should it attract special attention. Let the regulator, registrar of companies, handle it like any other mismanaged society.

The court played this with a straight bat, constructi­ng a compelling justificat­ion based on cricket’s special position in India. The sport, it explained, belonged to fans and the BCCI by its actions had breached their trust. Hence the need to set the house in order keeping national interest in mind. With this, all objections dismissed, case on.

Lodha committee followed, suggesting sweeping reforms directed at better governance, which meant stripping career officials of their power and patronage.

The BCCI fought back, refused to play ball and behaved as a petulant batsman who decides not to leave the field when dismissed. Presented with defiance instead of compliance, the court appointed a CoA to implement reforms, in effect imposing a sporting President’s rule.

It’s almost two years since the SC passed a clear order, and the CoA is running cricket since January 2017.

During this period, it has produced eight status reports stating they have made zero progress and Lodha reforms remain a distant dream. Essentiall­y, what promised to be a quick 20-over game turned out to be a play-tofinish timeless test; a surgical strike converted into long drawn trench warfare .

A helpless CoA is seeking instructio­ns from the Supreme Court but in true tareek par tareek style the matter hasn’t been heard for months .This state of suspension is sad, occasional­ly comical, as the CoA and BCCI squabble publicly over serious policy matters (day/night tests, fitness standards, domestic cricket payment structure) and trivial issues (jaunts, allowances, match tickets, sub-committee meetings).

This tug of war is seriously damaging cricket. Developmen­t activities have ceased because states are starved of funds. Management stands paralysed as officials are unsure whether they will continue to hold office, or sent on compulsory ‘cooling’.

Mumbai and Delhi are governed by non-domain expert outsiders and cricket has hit a pause button in Hyderabad and Rajasthan. It is easy to argue that Indian cricket has taken a backward step instead of moving forward .

Interestin­gly, the current uncertaint­y and confusion is not without a touch of irony.As matters drag on endlessly, both CoA and the (old) BCCI stay in ‘office’ and neither is directly accountabl­e to stakeholde­rs.

There is hope this will change with a fresh constituti­on and fresh elections that will throw up fresh faces. But, seeing the elections playing out in DDCA not everyone is sure the ground reality, of power and influence,will change.

There are no proxy votes but proxy candidates and the campaign is full of social media outreach,video clips, persistent calls — and daily ‘get togethers’ with khaana and daaru.

All legit in a democratic setup, but when similar power struggles are unleashed in various states the average fan would wonder what feel abandoned.

Has the Supreme Court restored his trust ?

STYLE THE MATTER HASN’T BEEN HEARD FOR MONTHS.

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