The Asian Age

Never imagined I will be part of BCCI: Shantha

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New Delhi, Oct. 11: Former India captain Shantha Rangaswamy, who is set to be a part of the powerful nine-member BCCI apex council, says she never imagined that any woman cricketer will “storm the male bastion” that the Indian cricket board is.

Rangaswamy is set to get elected unopposed in the Indian Cricketers’ Associatio­n (ICA) elections and will be its female representa­tive on the BCCI apex council. “Never ever in my dreams I imagined I would be sitting on the board. I did not even imagine a male cricketer on the board, let alone us. Some may be cursing the Lodha reforms but it is only because of that, we finally have a voice in the board. It is like storming a male bastion,” 65-year-old Rangaswamy said on Friday.

Rangaswamy, who played the game when women’s cricket was neglected and not recognised by the BCCI, said female representa­tion in the country’s cricket board is a giant leap for the sport. She was the first woman recipient of BCCI’s lifetime achievemen­t award and it was under her captaincy that India won a Test series for the first time.

After formation of the apex council, Rangaswamy will push her five-point vision for the growth of women’s cricket which has now become a viable career option with the support of BCCI.

She wants the retired internatio­nal women cricketers to get the same pension as former Ranji Trophy cricketers, if not more. She also wants retired domestic cricketers to get BCCI pension and an increase in the match fees of current domestic players who she claims are paid as much the U-19 boys.

“I am not saying the Ranji cricketers don’t deserve the pension they are getting, I only want the women internatio­nal cricketers to come at par with them. And domestic cricketers getting paid as much as the U-19 boys is unacceptab­le,” said Rangaswamy.

She also rued that in the last 15 years, not much has been done to promote coaching among women. “Many level 2 female coaches have been deprived of graduating to level 3. They have not been able to enter profession­al coaching,” she said.

Some may be cursing the Lodha reforms but it is only because of that, we finally have a voice in the board. It is like storming a male bastion.

—SHANTHA RANGASWAMY

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