No place for Modi in new BCCI set-up

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – Former Indian Premier League  (IPL) Commissioner Lalit Modi was the main casualty when the  country’s cricket board announced five new vice-presidents yesterday leaving him without any involvement in Indian cricket.

The flamboyant industrialist, who polarised opinion with his  management style, was dropped by the Board of Control for  Cricket in India (BCCI) which suspended him as IPL chief in  April saying he had “brought a bad name to the administration of  cricket”.

The BCCI also gave Chirayu Amin, who was made interim IPL  chief after Modi’s suspension, a one-year term at the helm of  the governing council of the Twenty20 league.

The cricket board, in a statement, also named union minister  Farooq Abdullah as the new chairman of the BCCI marketing  committee, which Modi had headed.

“Modi is not part of the BCCI any more. He cannot say he’s  suspended IPL chairman,” BCCI president Shashank Manohar was  quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India news agency after  the cricket board’s annual general meeting in Mumbai.

CRICKET
REVOLUTION

Under Modi, the $4 billion IPL helped revolutionise cricket  with its short, television-friendly format combined with  lucrative advertising and cheerleaders in packed arenas which  upset many traditionalists.

Mukesh Ambani, India’s richest man and the head of Reliance  Industries, Vijay Mallya, who controls United Spirits, the  world’s second largest alcohol maker, and Bollywood superstar  Shah Rukh Khan all control teams who play in the league.

Cricket’s enormous popularity made the BCCI one of the  richest sporting bodies in the world and brought to its board  politicians, businessmen and royalty.

Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar’s links to the game and  the NCP leader’s earlier support for Modi have caused frictions  with the Congress, especially after Junior Foreign Minister  Shashi Tharoor was forced to resign after Modi accused him of  using political muscle to influence team bids.

Removed soon after the third edition of the league, Modi is  battling charges of financial irregularities having denied any  wrongdoing.

Meanwhile, BCCI said former India captain Anil Kumble will  succeed Ravi Shastri, an IPL governing council member, as the  new chairman of the National Cricket Academy.

BCCI secretary N Srinivasan will take over from Shashank  Manohar as the next board president.

The board also unveiled Hyderabad as a test venue.
“Hyderabad will be the new test centre and has been allotted  the second Test against New Zealand (in November),” read the  BCCI statement.