DRAMATIC TWIST IN THE TALE: SHANSHANK MANOHAR DETHRONES SRINIVASAN WHO ONCE ‘PREDICTED’
ICC TOP JOB FOR HIM
Qaiser Mohammad Ali
@AlwaysCricket
When N. Srinivasan at the 2011 BCCI AGM in September said
that since Shashank Manohar was quite “young” he should accept ICC’s leadership
“sometime in future” little did he know that four years later his words would
come true – and at his own expense.
Obviously, Srinivasan had absolutely no inkling that 1,409
days later, Manohar would replace him as ICC boss in most acrimonious
circumstances — and after highly dramatic and rapidly changed scenario within
the BCCI.
During that 2011 AGM, the last meeting for Manohar as BCCI
president, Srinivasan had quite sensationally disclosed that at one point in
time ICC member countries wanted Manohar to take charge as ICC president.
Manohar, then still 10 days shy of turning 54, had politely
declined. Sources close to him told this reporter that he didn’t want to take
over the ICC reins immediately after his three-year BCCI term as president
(2008-11).
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International Cricket Council headquarters in Dubai. |
A little over four years, circumstances changed so
dramatically that a reluctant 58-year-old Manohar, known widely for his clean
image, was virtually forced into taking over the BCCI reins after the death of
Jagmohan Dalmya in September.
Manohar had largely kept low — only occasionally speaking
out against the vice-like grip of Srinivasan on the BCCI, particularly after
the IPL betting scandal broke out – since demitting BCCI president’s office on
19 September 2011 and handing over the charge to Srinivasan.
In a speech praising Manohar at the 2011 AGM, Srinivasan had
begun dramatically, said two officials who were present at the meeting.
“Srinivasan made the disclosure about the ICC presidentship
offer for Manahar during his speech even as he profusely praised the hard work
done by him [Manohar] during his three-year tenure (2008-11) as BCCI
president,” the officials had told this reporter.
Addressing the BCCI general body, Srinivasan had said: “None
of you know that he [Manohar] was once offered the ICC presidentship, but
knowing the man he is, he declined the offer… But he is still quite young and I
think he should accept it sometime in the future.”
After the AGM, Srinivasan independently confirmed to this
reporter the ICC offer for Manohar. “People in the ICC felt that he should
become the president — that’s the esteem in which they held him,” Srinivasan
had said.
One possible reason why Manohar declined the offer was that
he was to succeed an Indian as ICC president, Sharad Pawar, and two
administrators from one country couldn’t have become president, unless the ICC
constitution was changed.
When asked if the ICC constitution would be changed to
accommodate Manohar, Srinivasan had that day simply said, “That’s speculative.
Don’t ask me.”
Sources close to Manohar, however, said that he is a kind of
person who hadn’t wanted to take up the ICC responsibility soon after the BCCI
presidentship. “He wanted a gap between the two [high-profile] jobs,” one of
them had said.
Whatever the real reason, Srinivasan’s ‘prediction’ on 19
September 2011 came true on 9 November 2015 – 1,409 days later.
There could perhaps be no better person than Manohar to
guide the BCCI in the present circumstances, when the world’s wealthiest
cricket board is under intense scrutiny from all sides, particularly after the
2013 IPL betting-fixing scandal.
However, before agreeing for the job, Manohar had made it
clear that he would not tolerate interference from anyone. Another reason for
his emphasis was that a day before taking over he got an opportunity to read
the mind of former Chief Justice of India RM Lodha, under whom the Supreme
Court has appointed a committee to recommend reforms for the BCCI.
Manohar, according to sources, announced many steps that
Lodha would probably recommend in his report that he is due to submit with the
Supreme Court next month. Some people in the BCCI are already jittery at the
prospect of the wide ranging recommendations that Lodha, known for his
integrity, is expected to make to the Supreme Court.
Manohar, who has two years are left in his tenure after
Dalmiya governed for one year, has already implemented a few of the steps he
had promised on October 4, including the BCCI Annual Report, which comprises
the highly secretive balance sheet.
In the last few years the BCCI has been uploading a portion
of the Annual Report, but on Monday, it posted the entire 152-page report,
though again on indications from Lodha Committee, says sources.
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