SLPL future to be decided on Friday
Sri Lanka Cricket's new interim committee will meet with Somerset Entertainment Ventures on Friday to discuss the future of the Sri Lanka Premier League
Tariq Engineer and Nagraj Gollapudi
05-Jul-2011

Sidath Wettimuny has denied that the SLPL will involve only Sri Lankan players • Getty Images
Sri Lanka Cricket's new interim committee will meet with Somerset
Entertainment Ventures on Friday to discuss the future of the Sri Lanka
Premier League (SLPL). The previous committee, which created the tournament,
was dissolved last week by Sri Lanka's sports ministry and a new panel was
appointed in its place. ESPNcricinfo understands that the new committee is
still getting up to speed on the tournament and will decide how to go ahead
with it once they have met Somerset.
"We have not yet met the SLPL organisers," Sidath Wettimuny, one of the
members of the new committee, told ESPNcricinfo. "The meeting is scheduled on
Friday." Wettimuny also denied rumours that the tournament had been
postponed or that it would go ahead with only Sri Lankan players.
The change in administration so close to the launch of the tournament is the
latest setback for the SLPL, which has already been hit by the BCCI's
refusal to allow Indian players to take part. The BCCI had withheld its
permission on the grounds that Somerset, which owns the commercial rights,
would be handling the contracts for international players and that could
lead to complications should disputes arise over payments. In order to
assuage the Indian board, SLC was willing to back the Indian players'
contracts so that their financial interests were protected, but that was not
enough to satisfy the BCCI. The Indian board has also claimed that former IPL chairman Lalit Modi had a hand in the event, but SLC and Somerset have repeatedly denied
the allegation, as has Modi.
The BCCI's decision means the tournament does not have a broadcaster for the
lucrative Indian market, a situation that makes it much more difficult for
the SLPL to find a secure financial footing, something that the new
committee will have to consider.
One potential incentive for holding the tournament as scheduled is the
Champions League T20 in September. The winner of the SLPL receives a spot in
that tournament and since Sri Lanka host Australia in August and September,
July is the only available window before the CLT20. However, given that the
SLPL's first game is set for July 19th, SLC would have only 11 days
after Friday's meeting to organise the event, including putting in place security
for the players and the anti-corruption measures required by the ICC.
Tariq Engineer is a senior sub-editor; Nagraj Gollapudi is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo