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The Surfer

Dream farewells can't be scripted in boardrooms

Harsha Bhogle, writing in the Indian Express criticises the idea of a VRS scheme for India's senior cricketers

George Binoy
George Binoy
25-Feb-2013
Harsha Bhogle, writing in the Indian Express criticises the idea of a VRS scheme for India's senior cricketers. He's also worried that the Indian media are more obsessed with reporting what happens off the field rather than on it.
If, as in the current situation, you have players who have done very well for a long time and a call has to be taken on their future, the selectors first make up their mind and then have a dignified conversation with the player concerned. The non-negotiable here is the selector’s decision. You cannot sign a deal with a player for four games, for example, and keep him in the side if he doesn’t score a run in the first three and drop him if he makes a double hundred in the fourth ...
... Let’s return then to where we began, to the VRS story. If there is no such scheme should it be flashed in the media? Indian cricket, or indeed anything to do with public life, will always spawn conspiracy theories. But a news channel, by its very nomenclature, tells the ‘news’. It doesn’t gossip, it cannot clothe conspiracy theories in holier garbs because once it does so it no longer has the moral right to claim to be the “news”. It worries me as well that more and more young men and women are getting obsessed with reporting what happens off the field rather than on it.

George Binoy is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo