BCCI meet to restructure domestic circuit
The Board of Control for Cricket in India's (BCCI) working committee is to meet in New Delhi on May 19 and going by the recent developments regarding match fixing they seem to have their hands full
Natarajan Sriram
17-May-2000
The Board of Control for Cricket in India's (BCCI) working committee
is to meet in New Delhi on May 19 and going by the recent developments
regarding match fixing they seem to have their hands full. One that is
sure to be at the top of their agenda is former BCCI president IS
Bindra's submission of a 360 page document to the Central Bureau of
Investigation (CBI), allegations on the Indian coach Kapil Dev and the
subsequent theatrics.
Apart from that, the meeting also proposes to have an appraisal of the
meetings the board officials and players had with the International
Cricket Council (ICC) president Jagmohan Dalmiya in Calcutta and the
Sports Minister SS Dhindsa regarding the recent match-fixing scandal
last month.
The working committee meeting has been primarily convened to consider
changes in the basic format of the premier domestic tournaments. The
tournaments in question being the Ranji Trophy and the Duleep Trophy.
The board would also be considering doing away with the Super League
stage in the Ranji Trophy. Thus instead of the existing system, it
proposes to have two or three teams from each zone qualifying for the
knockout stage of the tournament.
The other change in the domestic structure is expected to occur in the
Duleep trophy where the league format is to be re-introduced in
tournament and it is to be made mandatory for all top players to
participate in the tournament.
Moreover, it would be proposed that the Duleep Trophy tournament
should not take place at the time of a foreign tour and that it should
be played only at good approved centres while one-day matches which
were for quite some time being played a day before Ranji zonal league
games will be played separately at a stretch over a week in each of
the zones. The other changes to be approved in the meeting regarding
the domestic tournaments will include starting domestic season from
the second week of October.
Next in line would be the consideration of a request by the England
Cricket Board (ECB) for an under-19 tour of India in winter 2001 and
India's participation in the inaugural Asian Cricket Council under-15
tournament in Malaysia next month.
A contract for players who are called for national duty and
introduction of fee linked to performance and the nomination of a
medical panel to determine fitness of the players so as to end all the
associated controversies that come with it are to be discussed and
finalized. It is also expected to bring in medical tests in junior
cricket to determine right age.
Last but not the least, the board will also finalise all the envisaged
arrangements taken up for the newly established National Cricket
Academy in Bangalore. Apart from these the meeting would discuss other
routine issues including the construction of BCCI headquarters in
Mumbai.