The Asian Age

BCCI may make West Indies pay

NO COMPENSATI­ON FOR TEST VENUES

- MOSES KONDETY

Miffed with the West Indies abruptly aborting their recent series with India, the Board of Control for Cricket in India is all set to put its foot down on Tuesday in an attempt to show the Caribbeans who the Big Brother in world cricket is when the allpowerfu­l Working Committee meets to discuss punitive action.

Slapping a legal suit to claim damages as a result of the Windies cancelling their tour midway owing to a pay dispute between the players and the West Indies Cricket Board tops the agenda when the BCCI big wigs meet here. “The West Indies calling off the series halfway through has caused us huge losses. The Working Committee will deliberate and decide on the legal action to be taken against the West Indies board,” BCCI acting president N. Shivlal Yadav told this newspaper on Monday.

The damages determined are approximat­ely Rs 400 crore, the revenue BCCI would have earned in the 12 days of play that was purged. The number of matchplay days lost is after taking into considerat­ion the five One- Day Internatio­nals against Sri Lanka that have been squeezed in at short notice. The Windies left with three Tests, an ODI and a Twenty20 still to play.

The Committee “will also finalise the dates and venues for the Lankan series,” Shivlal said, adding, “The Tour Programme and Fixtures Committee may not be called for to decide the dates for just this one series as an exception.”

However, three of the key members of the Fixtures Committee would be here anyway - convenor Sanjay Patel and chairman Rajeev Hyderabad, Oct. 20: The BCCI is likely to stick to its regular rotational policy as against the rumoured compensati­on theory while deciding on the venues for the five One- Day Internatio­nals against Sri Lanka as at the Working Committee meeting here on Tuesday.

The West Indies were scheduled to play an ODI Shukla are part of the Working Committee while South Zone representa­tive P. Yadagiri is from Hyderabad, which should make it easier.

The IPL Governing Council will meet prior to the Working Committee to consider barring the in Kolkata, a Twenty20 in Cuttack and Tests in Hyderabad, Bangalore and Ahmedabad when they cut short their tour. But the Test centres may not be compensate­d with games against Lanka. “Mohali and Ranchi are in line and I don’t think Hyderabad figures in the ODI queue,” BCCI acting president N. Shivlal Yadav said. Caribbeans from BCCI’s cash- rich league. However, the officials just might stop short of wielding the axe. “They could discuss the issue but I doubt they’ll be so harsh on the players. The IPL is already devoid of players from Pakistan and some key ones from England. Keeping the high- profile West Indians out as well would mean taking a fair bit of charm off the League,” a BCCI official said. Dwayne Bravo, Dwayne Smith ( Chennai Super Kings), Kieron Pollard ( Mumbai Indians), Sunil Narine ( Kolkata Knight Riders) and Chris Gayle ( Royal Challenger­s Bangalore) are big draws at India’s annual cricket carnival.

However, the BCCI will make a strong push for ICC sanctions against the West Indies Cricket Board. Secretary Sanjay Patel is on record saying: “We will pursue the matter with the ICC. We may consider to not pursue further Future Tour Programmes with the West Indies.” That would effectivel­y leave the West Indies board bleeding, given the astronomic­al broadcast rights money a series with India generates.

With India’s N. Srinivasan at the helm of ICC, the Windies may well be bracing up for a violent storm.

 ??  ?? Sanjay Patel
Sanjay Patel
 ??  ?? Shivlal Yadav
Shivlal Yadav

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