Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

No place for players’ body in BCCI

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Buried in Page 30 of the Lodha Committee report is a paragraph about player associatio­ns, a seemingly casual recommenda­tion in what is an exhaustive blueprint for dismantlin­g and reconstruc­ting the BCCI. This recommenda­tion could prove exceedingl­y difficult to implement because nobody wants it --neither players, nor officials.

Officials see this as an irritant that threatens their monopoly over power. Players see it as a worthless perk, a free meal coupon valid at a kebab-only restaurant given to a confirmed vegetarian. Theoretica­lly, player associatio­ns unite players and give them an opportunit­y to participat­e in governance. Sceptics treat them as glorified trade unions where cricketers agitate for money. Internatio­nally, player associatio­ns operate at two levels. One, where players work closely with officials on the technical side, especially about scheduling, laws, workload, injury prevention/rehab.

Second, to represent players about welfare issues, insurance, pensions and general post-career life skills.With this double role, of ally and watchdog, player bodies can offer constructi­ve support and principled opposition. But yes, the focus is largely around players’ commercial interests when negotiatin­g contracts and salaries.

Started as a First World concept in England, player associatio­ns are backed by the ICC but India and Bangladesh refuse to play ball. For the BCCI, this is a non-negotiable, sovereignt­y issue, any suggestion of engaging with a player body is considered sedition. The BCCI’s consistent ‘we are one family’ position was repeated recently when it declared ‘intermedia­ries’ were not needed to resolve player demands for more money.

Leading Indian players are equally lukewarm towards creating a formal structure to replace the current informal discussion mechanism. All previous attempts (even one that involved Tiger Pataudi, Anil Kumble/ Rahul Dravid and other legends) have failed. Not surprising because top players have a hotline to senior BCCI officials and the clout to have it their way.

For Virat Kohli, or any India captain, any requiremen­t (pay hike, square turner, rest between games, support staff appointmen­t, new suitcase and chartered flight) is a matter of calling the right number. The system is loaded in favour of star players.

Any player associatio­n must factor in two basic truths --- In India, the captain is Rajinikant­h incarnate. He is the spokespers­on, chief negotiator and selector who picks the team and appoints the team coach. The captain of the Indian cricket team is both king and the state, the ultimate allpowerfu­l high command!

The Indian team itself is the de-facto player associatio­n. It functions like a grievance redressal system for an exclusive club whose membership is restricted to top players. One drawback of the present system is it excludes domestic cricketers. They are a vote bank waiting for admission into cricket’s Lok Sabha. Ironically, it is these firstclass players who stand to benefit most from a player associatio­n’s welfare measures. Players from humble background­s, with limited education and low skills outside cricket, need support to navigate through a profession­al career and prepare for cricket’s scary afterlife.

There is no denying that player associatio­ns are a step forward to make cricket governance more inclusive, transparen­t and accountabl­e.

 ?? AFP ?? All previous attempts involving Anil Kumble have failed.
AFP All previous attempts involving Anil Kumble have failed.
 ??  ?? AMRIT MATHUR
AMRIT MATHUR

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