Weekend Herald

Mystery as ICC chairman suddenly hands in his resignatio­n

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In big sport, as in business, it’s rare there are surprises when a senior figure resigns. Generally it has been signalled well in advance to those in the know.

And that makes the resignatio­n of the Internatio­nal Cricket Council’s chairman Shashank Manohar this week a rare event.

Manohar, the leading figure in the move to return power to the full ICC rather than have it sitting in the selfservin­g hands of India, Australia and England, has gone, citing personal reasons.

He was the first independen­t chairman of the ICC, appointed last year, and goes at an important time for the game.

Next month the ICC is due to confirm changes to the governance of the game, and take power back from the Big Three.

The alteration­s were agreed in principle last month by a 7- 2 majority — India and Sri Lanka against, Zimbabwe abstaining.

India need four votes to turn the proposal back and scupper the twothirds majority required next month.

They have recently met officials from Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, and announced an ODI series involving at least two of those teams. Draw your own conclusion­s.

Manohar, an Indian who previously headed the Indian board, has been critical of their manoeuvrin­g, calling them “not always in the best interests of the game”.

He pushed for a more equitable model, and his proposed changes will see the BCCI’s income from a new television rights deal fall from about $ US450 million to about $ 290 million — still the largest chunk of revenue, but that’s small consolatio­n to the money- hungry Indian board.

India aren’t happy. Their cricket administra­tion is in chaos, the board suspended by India’s Supreme Court and its affairs in the hands of four disparate, but respected figures — a former auditor general of India, an eminent historian, the managing director of India’s largest stock exchange and a former captain of India’s women’s team.

Last month, the ICC talked of introducin­g a rolling two- year test championsh­ip and World Cup qualificat­ion through a three- year cycle of ODI cricket. New plans are to be ratified next month. Manohar’s departure puts a giant question mark over that.

When his resignatio­n letter reached ICC chief executive Dave Richardson on Wednesday night ( NZT) it was of jaw- dropping, “he’s done what?” magnitude.

There is talk that Manohar had agreed a small increase on the initial reduction on the proposed revenue share to India. He’s reported to have been in good spirits. Then the bombshell a day later.

“It was a total surprise,” New Zealand Cricket’s chairman Greg Barclay said. “I thought everything was tracking well and he gave every indication of being comfortabl­e in his role.”

So what happened? No one seems to know but mutterings are afoot that in some way Manohar was nobbled.

Countries were quick to jump on the Big Three takeover in 2014 as a good thing, afraid of standing up to, in particular, the financial muscle of India, so they can’t be trusted not to take that path again next month.

One prominent cricket voice, Sambit Bal of ESPNcricin­fo, has contended that if the reforms go ahead it could be a return to the days when the “BCCI was outside the tent growling and ready to strike”.

Much good planning could fall under the bus if countries opt not to press on with the reforms. In that sense, Manohar’s departure shapes as potentiall­y a dark day for the governance of the game.

 ??  ?? David Leggat
David Leggat

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