Deccan Chronicle

Parekh’s presence sorely needed for Sunny

- Ayaz Memon

Sunil Gavaskar’s request to Deepak Parekh, chairman of HDFC, to join the Governing Council of IPL7 may have caught a lot of people unawares, but doesn’t really surprise me: this was sorely needed.

Readers will remember that two weeks ago, after Gavaskar had been made interim BCCI chief by the Supreme Court looking into the corruption case in IPL, this column had argued that while he had very little time to achieve anything spectacula­r, he would do well to establish a fresh template for the Governing Council.

The Council is at the core of every major decision that takes place in the IPL: from the technical aspect to those of finance, security et al. While there are countless numbers of people involved in the running of the tournament, the buck finally stops with members in this august body.

Gavaskar, who was a member of the Governing Council from its inception in 2008 till 2010 (he quit because the post was made honorary) has surely been closely tracking what’s been happening and what the problem is. Being a pragmatist, he has realized that a crucial value add could go a long way in improving the perception of the IPL.

It has been my constant contention that the recurring and several misgivings about the integrity of the IPL stem from a fundamenta­l flaw in the compositio­n of the Governing Council. For a project this size — in terms of finance and logistics — it simply couldn’t be run by a cosy club of cricket administra­tors and cricketers, however good their intentions.

While a small, homoge- nous group could facilitate a quick start to the tournament, it simply couldn’t infuse trust in fans and critics over a period of time. As in any other big sized business, drawing in people of high reputation into the board of directors (or GC in this case), not only increases transparen­cy, but also adds heft to the expertise.

This is hardly unusual in sport: in fact it is the practice followed by every major sports league in the world and it beats understand­ing why the BCCI, with so many from the cor-

From what we know of Mr Parekh, he is not only a renowned technocrat, but also a sports buff, especially cricket. His passion for the game, apart from the challenge of the assignment, will have made him agree.

His unimpeacha­ble reputation will go some way in restoring a semblance of trust among fans, even if he is only in an advisory capacity.

porate and legal sectors, could not have foreseen the problems ahead.

With some controvers­y or the other erupting every year, it not only deepened the crisis in the IPL, but also considerab­ly weakened faith in the people in charge. This is turn gave rise to several misgivings about the integrity of the tournament and indeed Indian cricket.

The corruption scam that broke last year has particular­ly eroded the credibilit­y of most administra­tors and virtually brought the IPL to its knees. Nobody, not the most ardent fan, wants to be cheated.

But what

the

scam exposed was not just a grisly underbelly to the IPL and laxity in enforcing anti-corruption measures, but more crucially, a Governing Council that was totally ill-equipped to act.

Which brings us to Mr Deepak Parekh’s appointmen­t to the Governing Council: how much can he benefit the IPL and Indian cricket?

From what we know of Mr Parekh, he is not only a renowned technocrat, but also a sports buff, especially cricket.

His passion for the game, apart from the challenge of the assignment, will have made him agree. I reckon his unimpeacha­ble reputation will go some way in restoring a semblance of trust in people, even if he is only in an advisory capacity. But I would like something more substantiv­e from Messrs Paresh and Gavaskar.

How about a White Paper post the completion of IPL7 on what ails the IPL and how it can be improved? This could serve as the document that should have been drafted originally, but better late than never. He has a reputation for playing whirlwind knocks at the top. The southpaw from New South Wales is young, aggressive and fearless. A look back at his solitary T20 knock against India at Rajkot (34 off 16 balls) would reveal his calibre as a T20 specialist and his ability to handle the spinners. Age: 22; Performanc­e in BBL: 211 runs in 9 matches. The right-handed Queen slander has the ability to whack a cricket ball long and hard — it’s backed up by his strike rate of 173.68 on debut (33*) for Australia against England earlier this year. With 14 sixes, he has clearly demonstrat­ed his prowess in clearing the ropes during the last BBL Age: 24; Performanc­e in BBL: 198 runs in 8 matches.

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