The Free Press Journal

BCCI is denying young Dhonis, Kohlis chance

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday pulled up BCCI for "monopolizi­ng" cricket in the country and said several youngsters wanting to be Dhonis and Kohlis are not given equal opportunit­y if they are not on the right side of the cricket body. "Several youngsters in the country want to make their career in cricket and want to be Dhonis and Kohlis due to the glamour and glitz associated with it. They do not get equal opportunit­y if they are not on the right side of the BCCI. Sometimes they are prevented by the people at the helm of affairs," a bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur said.

The apex court also appointed senior advocate Gopal Subramaniu­m as amicus curiae in the matter and sought his assistance to explore as to how the recommenda­tions of Justice R M Lodha committee favouring large-scale structural reforms, which BCCI and other boards have been resisting, could be implemente­d.

The bench, also comprising Justice FMI Kalifulla, expressed anguish over the cricket body running a "prohibitor­y regime and monopolizi­ng cricket" across the country, saying no one can play the game without its nod. "You (BCCI) are running a prohibitor­y regime which is spread across the country. If a player has to play cricket he has to be with you. You have complete monopoly. You have monopoly over members and you prevent people from becoming members. "Suppose a state from North East wants to be a member in BCCI. You are not allowing it to become a member because your writ lies there also.You don't want to give them equal opportunit­y. You have complete monopoly over Team India because you select them and don't want to give the right to anyone else. We need to balance things," the bench said. The court said it fails to understand why there should be any problem to anyone because the Justice R M Lodha-led committee has opened the membership to other states and recommende­d one-state one-vote. The bench also said when one country, irrespecti­ve of its population, constitute­s one vote in Internatio­nal Cricket Council, then why cannot the formula work for the BCCI.

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