BCCI PRESIDENT MANOHAR REJECTS KEJRIWAL-HEADED DELHI GOVT’S
PROPOSAL TO JOINTLY ORGANISE FOURTH INDIA-SA TEST IN DELHI
Qaiser Mohammad Ali, Managing Editor,
www.JantaKaReporter.com
@AlwaysCricket
BCCI president Shashank Manohar on Saturday rejected an
offer from Arvind Kejriwal’s Delhi government to jointly host the fourth and
final Test match against South Africa in Delhi, saying that the Delhi and
District Cricket Association was the lone legitimate body to stage the game.
A special committee of the Delhi government met Manohar in
Nagpur on Saturday to explore the possibility of jointly organising the
five-day Test after the Chief Minister’s Office had received “some serious
complaints” about “financial irregularities and wrong-doings” against the DDCA
and some of its officials/members.
Manohar, however, “clearly” told the committee that the BCCI
would not allow any government, and not just Kejriwal’s Delhi government, to
administer cricket.
“How can we agree to a government hosting a match? If a
match has to be organised [in Delhi] only DDCA will have to host it. I have
told this to the committee. We cannot allow the government to run the game,”
Manohar told JantaKaReporter.com from his residence in Nagpur.
When asked if the Delhi government team had explicitly
offered to jointly stage the Test at the Ferozeshah Kotla, Manohar said, “A
discussion took place and during the discussion this issue cropped up. So, I
clearly told him that we can’t allow the government to run the game – not just
Delhi government but any government.”
How was the overall meeting? “All meetings are good. There
is never any problem in meetings,” Manohar quipped.
Manohar, widely known for his integrity, said that since the
BCCI has set a deadline of 17 November the DDCA, he would wait till that day
for a reply from the association.
The BCCI has already announced that in case the DDCA was not
able to host the game, Pune would stage it.
“I have given the DDCA time till 17 November. We will not
take a decision before that day. Whatever time we have given, we will wait till
then,” Manohar emphasised.
Manohar also clarified that Rajkot was not a second standby
for the Test match, as some people were speculating in Delhi. “There is no
standby. The game is allotted to Pune, if Delhi doesn’t host it,” he said.
Since the DDCA is virtually bankrupt at the moment, largely
a making of its own administrators over the years, the association cannot
organise the match without BCCI’s financial assistance.
A DDCA office-bearer said that the BCCI has been approached
to release Rs 10 crore, subject to the match being held at the Kotla.
“I have no idea about that [DDCA’s financial health]. I have
not received anything [request] from the DDCA,” Manohar said. “I will wait till
the evening of 17 November [for a reply from DDCA]. But the decision has been
made and it is that if DDCA is not able to host the match, Pune will host the
game.”
There has been a talk in Delhi that since the India-South
Africa series is being played for the Mahatma Gandhi-Nelson Mandela Trophy, and
the spirit of the two giants was being invoked. Therefore, it was said, that
Prime Minister Narendra Modi would present the trophy at the end of the fourth
Test. And since many of his ministers and dignitaries, including the South
African High Commissioner to India, were likely to witness the match, the match
should be held in Delhi.
A DDCA official confirmed that he has been sounded out about
the presence of Modi and other dignitaries.
However, a top BCCI official said that there was no
compulsion to host the Test in Delhi if the circumstances don’t allow that.
“It entirely depends on the Delhi government to grant or not
grant the necessary permissions to the DDCA for hosting the match. There is
nothing like the fourth Test has to be played in Delhi only. If that were the
case, why Pune would be put on standby,” he asked.
DDCA treasurer Ravinder Manchanda welcomed the stand Manohar
has taken.
“Naturally, our confidence goes up on hearing what Manohar
has to say. It shows that the BCCI is with us [DDCA],” Manchanda told
JantaKaReporter.com.
“Since time is short, we are still trying to get an
appointment with Kejriwal. We are hoping to hear from his office tomorrow
morning,” he said. “If we don’t get an appointment with him, one option before
us would be to get a stay order from the Delhi High Court [to defer payment of Rs
24.46 crore entertainment tax the Delhi government has slapped on DDCA].”
Meanwhile, the Delhi government team returned from Nagpur
and even started writing its report on Saturday evening. It, however, remains
to be seen if the report would be made public.
Constituted by deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia, the
three-member, led by Chetan B. Sanghi, Principal Secretary PWD, Urban
Development & Vigilance, was given two specific areas to probe and report
back.
They were: (i) A summary of the irregularities/wrong-doings,
if any, by the DDCA, its officials and members; and (ii) Suggestions for
revamping the DDCA to promote Cricket in the national capital.
The committee was given three days to submit its report to
Sisodia.
While announcing the committee, the government clarified
that Delhi should “not be deprived of good and international quality cricket”
but refrained from “commenting about conjectures on the capability of the DDCA
in hosting the Test between India and South Africa”, starting on 3 December.