Saturday Star

ICC chief in IPL probe

BCCI boss Srinivasan fingered for corruption in big-money league

- SAPA-AFP

NDIAN cricket was thrown into tur moil yesterday when the country’s highest court said four top officials, including the sport’s world chief Narayanasw­ami Srinivasan, may have been involved in corruption in the Indian Premier League.

The Supreme Court said Srinivasan, his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan, IPL chief executive Sundar Raman and Rajasthan Royals owner Raj Kundra were among those who were investigat­ed by a panel it had appointed to look into the scandal.

“We have seen the report and it did suggest some misdemeano­ur on part of certain individual­s,” the Press Trust of India quoted a two-judge bench as saying, without elaboratin­g.

“Certain findings recorded by the committee are understood to have indicted some individual­s whose conduct has been investigat­ed.”

The court ordered that copies of the report be handed to these four of ficials and asked their lawyers to submit any objections within four days.

It also said the identities of the remaining nine people under investigat­ion, most of whom are believed to be cricketers, should not be disclosed. Their names were handed to the court in a sealed envelope in February.

A lawyer for the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) told the court the body would delay its annual elections scheduled for November

I20, in which Srinivasan was expected to be re-elected as president for a three-year term. A guilty verdict against the officials could lead to a major shake-up in the glitzy IPL Twenty20 tournament where rules state that a franchise should be banned if any official is found to have brought the game to disrepute.

The next hearing in the case will be on November 24.

Meiyappan is the team principal of the Chennai Super Kings franchise, a team owned by Srinivasan’s India Cements company and captained by India skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni.

The court had barred Srinivasan from carrying out his duties as BCCI president until it delivered its final verdict, but did not stop him from heading the Internatio­nal Cricket Council.

The sixth IPL season last year was mired in controvers­y after police launched le gal proceeding­s against several IPL officials and cricketers, including for mer Test fast bowler Shanthakum­aran Sreesanth, for illegal betting and spot-fixing.

The IPL, which began in 2008, features the world’s top players signed up for huge fees by companies and high-profile individual­s in a glitzy mix of sport and entertainm­ent.

Internatio­nal news organisati­ons including Agence France-Presse have suspended on-field coverage of matches hosted by the BCCI since 2012 after the board imposed restrictio­ns on picture agencies.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? NUMBER ONE: Novak Djokovic celebrates beating Tomas Berdych at the ATP World Tour Finals in London yesterday.
PICTURE: AP NUMBER ONE: Novak Djokovic celebrates beating Tomas Berdych at the ATP World Tour Finals in London yesterday.

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