Oman Daily Observer

India’s Shashank Manohar quits ICC chairman’s post

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NEW DELHI: India’s Shashank Manohar resigned on Wednesday as chairman of the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) after a fallout with his own board over efforts to reform the game’s world governing body.

Manohar took over last year as the first independen­t ICC chairman for a two-year term and had been trying to bring in changes to the ICC’s governance designed to reduce the power of cricket’s most powerful nations — India, Australia and England. But the organisati­on now faces a fresh bout of turmoil after the divisions between the powerful Indian board and most of the rest of the game erupted into the open.

“The ICC has confirmed it has received an e-mail from Chairman Shashank Manohar tendering his resignatio­n,” the organisati­on said in a brief statement after news of the resignatio­n had been leaked.

“The ICC Board will assess the situation and next steps before making a further announceme­nt.”

Manohar, the 59-year-old former head of the Indian board, cited personal reasons in his letter to ICC chief executive David Richardson, according to the cricinfo website.

“I have tried to do my best and have tried to be fair and impartial in deciding matters in the functionin­g of the board and in matters related to member boards along with the able support of all directors,” he wrote.

“However, for personal reasons it is not possible for me to hold the august office of ICC chairman and hence I am tendering my resignatio­n as chairman with immediate effect.”

TUSSLE FOR POWER India last month voted against a proposed shake-up of the ICC, fearing a curb of its earnings and clout as a result of the changes to the organisati­on’s financial and governance structure.

Manohar had argued that the reforms would ensure “a more equitable distributi­on of revenues” and greater equality within the game by attaching equal weight to each member nation’s vote in board meetings.

Manohar, who is a lawyer by profession, took over as president of the BCCI in October 2015 for a second stint after the death of veteran administra­tor Jagmohan Dalmiya.

But he soon became frustrated after coming under pressure to introduce reforms to the BCCI’s governance recommende­d by a panel convened by the Supreme Court and stood down from the post in May 2016.

Cricket’s massive popularity in India has helped the BCCI become by far the wealthiest of all of the sport’s national boards, netting massive money from sponsorshi­p and TV deals.

In January, the Supreme Court ordered the dismissal of the powerful BCCI President Anurag Thakur over the failure to enact a series of recommende­d reforms, including agelimits for office-holders.

The order came after judges slapped restrictio­ns on the BCCI’s accounts last year, a decision that nearly cancelled a series against England. The board is currently headed by former government auditor Vinod Rai.

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Shashank Manohar

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