Heed The Boundary
The Lodha Committee’s status report, highlighting how
the Board of Control for Cricket in India has failed to adopt the
recommended administrative reforms, has left the game’s officials in a
quandary. In a 79-page report filed in the Supreme Court, Justice R.M.
Lodha has said the BCCI’s current office-bearers would have to
relinquish their posts for the proposed changes to be effected. Lending
greater force to the punch, Chief Justice of India T.S. Thakur said the
BCCI elite would have to “fall in line, or else we will make them fall
in line”. The provocation for these firm strictures was the BCCI’s
Annual General Meeting in Mumbai on September 21, where a slew of
decisions were taken, ranging from the nomination of Sharad Pawar as
‘alternate director for International Cricket Council meetings’ to the
appointment of new selection committees. The actions were seen as a
failure to heed the Supreme Court. When the Lodha Committee
green-lighted the BCCI’s AGM, it was with the caveat of sticking to
appraising the year 2015-16, but the board discarded the retrospective
gaze and instead looked ahead. The appointment of selection committees,
to cite one example, went against norms set by Justice Lodha, who had
recommended a three-member panel. The board stuck to the status quo of
having five.
Wednesday’s
developments in court now put the BCCI in a piquant situation. The
BCCI’s elbow room has shrunk, and it is expected that the chastised
board will toe the line, though it has time till October 6 to file a
reply in the Supreme Court. This sorry state of affairs couldn’t have
come at a more inopportune moment. India has a home season bounty — 13
Tests, including the match that concluded in Kanpur this week, and an
imminent Ranji Trophy schedule. Now there is the risk of disarray. The
sport is perhaps India’s best-governed, but the administrators refuse
accountability. The cricket schedule (domestic and international) is
well- drawn, former cricketers get a generous pension, young players
find financial security in the Indian Premier League, and there is much
to cheer in Indian cricket. But a refusal to embrace transparency and
the lack of respect for the ordinary fan have been emblematic of a
feudal mindset that guides cricket’s officialdom. BCCI secretary Ajay
Shirke has been quoted as saying the board did what it felt was best for
the game; BCCI president Anurag Thakur has often declared he is out to
clear “wrong perceptions”. Their intentions are, however, yet to be
matched by their actions. They need to take care they do not precipitate
what could be the most serious crisis yet for Indian cricket.
1)Heed meaning is pay attention to , take notice of
2)Quandary meaning is difficult situation, plight, awkward situation
3)Relinquish meaning is give up, renounce, quit
4)Elite meaning is best, first class, noble
5)Strictures meaning is criticism, blame, rebuke, censure
6)Caveat meaning is warning, admonition, caution
7)Piquant meaning is pungent, poignant, engaging
8)Chastised meaning is scold, rebuke,reprimand severly
9)Imminent meaning is impending,on the way, forthcoming
10)Precipitate meaning is expedite, hurry, speed
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