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Strike 2 for the BCCI

It was on May 16, 2013 that news broke of a spot-fixing scandal in the IPL, with the possible participation/collusion of officials connected with the Rajasthan Royals and Chennai Super Kings franchises. After two years of obfuscation, outright lies, evasions and the wholesale issuing of clean chits, we have a winner verdict, rendered today by the Supreme Court-appointed Lodha Commission. Here is the full text:

These are the salient points:

Gurunath Meyappan, erstwhile official of the Chennai Super Kings franchise, is effectively suspended for life from involvement in any official cricket activities.

Raj Kundra, part owner of the Rajasthan Royals franchise, is suspended for life from involvement in any cricketing activities

The CSK franchise, currently owned by India Cements, is suspended from the IPL for a period of two years.

The Rajasthan Royals franchise is similarly suspended from the IPL for a period of two years.

Important to note that the sanctions are against the franchises, and not against the players who are part of them — hence the players are free to play for other teams. (Equally, these two teams could become eligible again, if the present owners were to sell them to different entities).

This concludes part one of a two-part brief given to the Lodha Commission by the Supreme Court. Part two will follow. And about that, this is the full text of a piece I wrote for The Wire on June 3rd:

“I thought the FBI only happened in the movies”, a Brazilian football fan posted as news broke last week of midnightraids and the arrests of almost the entire upper echelons of the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA).

We are all Brazilian; we live in daily expectation of the caped crusader who will come along and sweep our world clean. Yet, two years and 18 days after we learnt that there is more than one reason for a bowler to dry his palms on a white towel, the Indian cricket tragic continues to dream of the avenging angel who will clean the game of the chronically corrupt.

Former Supreme Court Chief Justice Rajendra Mal Lodha and former SC judges Ashok Bhan and Raju Varadarajulu Raveendran, whose combined age is 207 years, make for an unlikely deus ex machina — but their work as a commission mandated to examine the workings of the Board of Control for Cricket In India and recommend solutions could  be more far-reaching than the night of the long knives we long for.

If their lordships focused on corruption, they would faced the problem of plenty: The immediate past president of the BCCI is entangled in a web of conflicting interests, the incumbent has the dubious distinction of having had an FIR filed against him for misappropriation of funds belonging to the very body he now heads, and the head of the Indian Premier League has presided over match fixing issues in two separate editions of the league. Where could any fact-finding mission possibly start? And to what end?

The commission appears to have decided to let the Augean stables remain uncleaned, opting to cut instead to the complex heart of the issue.

For the better part of three months, the judges have traveled to Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai and other cricketing centers, and met with or spoken to an array of former and present players, administrators, coaches, support staff and journalists, among others.

These interactions have been based on an 82-item questionnaire that provides the clearest indicator of the commission’s direction. The six-section questionnaire probes the BCCI’s structure, organisation and relationships with its affiliated units and with the global governing body; the source of its authority to run cricket in the country; the structure of its various offices and committees and the nature and conduct of election to its several posts; the transparency or lack thereof of the BCCI’s deals with construction and service companies, broadcasters, advertisers etc and other commercial partners; the way it accounts for its income and expenses and what if any transparency is built into the system; its relationships with the players and the need for an association representing the latter’s interests; and the question of serial conflicts of interests.

Not one of the 82 queries seeks information about any particular act of corruption — a seeming abdication of responsibility that is the hidden strength of this exercise. Corruption and misgovernment is so rife that the judges could spend the rest of their natural lives without inflicting a visible scratch on the surface. Instead, the commission’s intent is to moot a constitutional overhaul that will end the opacity shrouding the BCCI’s functioning, and put in place an alternate structure founded on the principles of transparency and accountability.

About time, too. India’s first representative tour (to England in 1912)  was sponsored by the Maharaja of Patiala, who was also captain and de facto team selector. The BCCI was born, 16 years later, of that amateur ethos.

103 years on, cricket has become a major industry. The simple constitution framed in December 1928 and held together over the years by a patchwork quilt of self-serving amendments is inadequate to cope with the big money and rapacious interests that now control the sport.

The  Lodha Commission appears to be guided by a fundamental premise: that if cricket in India is to be cleaned up, rooting around in the muck of the past is not the best use of its time. Instead, the commission seems bent on acquiring information on systemic flaws in the existing structure, which in turn will inform the framing of a revised constitution that is better suited to the era of cricket as big business.

Public sentiment — and hyperventilating chat-shows — would infinitely prefer a FIFA-style purge within the BCCI, and wish for the coming together of a Superman, Batman and Spiderman to cry havoc on the entrenched hierarchy. What we have instead are three soberly-clad, soft-spoken judges on a less headline-hungry, more visionary, mission. That may not be such a bad thing after all.

EOM

The post Strike 2 for the BCCI appeared first on Smoke Signals.


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