For some time now, the autonomous image of the Board of Control for
Cricket in India has taken a beating. In its seven decades of
existence, there has never really been a real threat to its autonomy.
Financially always on strong ground, the BCCI has never had to
approach the government for any assistance on this front. Except for
the routine release of foreign exchange or the token permission needed
whenever there is a series against Pakistan, there has been little
interaction with the government.
The match fixing scandal - and the subsequent income tax raids - have
changed the scenario. Not only has the BCCI been accused of not doing
anything to curb the menace, but the officials themselves have been
found to be not exactly above board. Too much freedom over the years
has led to nepotism, corruption and inefficiency. The board's
functioning has hardly been in keeping with the changing times, its
thinking generally archaic. But as long as the money was flowing in,
as long as the team was doing well, as long as the Gavaskars, Kapil
Devs and Tendulkars were around, everything seemed hunky dory about
the game in the country. Sure, there were times when cricket was in
the headlines for the wrong reasons, or when the game and the players
and the officials were discussed in Parliament. But all this was
quickly glossed over with the game enjoying a pre-eminent position in
the country.
Over the last couple of months, however the BCCI and the Sports
Ministry seemed to be on a collision course. The Union Sports Minister
SS Dhindsa and the Minister of State for Sports Shahnawaz Hussain have
been strident in their attacks against the board's functioning,
something that had not been done before. The BCCI for its part was in
no mood to part with its autonomous status. But despite JY Lele's
frequent 'we are an autonomous body' statements, subsequent
developments had the board secretary's stance inviting derisive
laughter. If it was really a self governing body, why did the board,
under pressure from the government, make the Chandrachud report
public? Why did it give a Vision report to the Sports Ministry? Why
did it agree to submit a Code of Conduct draft to Dhindsa? Why was
there not even a murmur of protest against the income tax raids?
But from the Board's angle, the most disturbing aspect is not even the
attacks from the government. Perhaps what would be causing the most
discomfiture are the strong words being used by former players. More
than one cricketer has come out with the suggestion that it is time
the government takes over the BCCI. Former captain Bishen Bedi has
always been vociferous in his attacks on the board and he has said it
is time the government takes over. And just the other day, the BCCI
came under the severest attack yet from another former Indian player
Kirti Azad.
Now a BJP Member of Parliament, Azad, 41, strongly urged the
government to take over the administration of the "high handed,
notorious and arrogant" BCCI till its new constitution was drafted and
office bearers elected. He said this was necessary keeping in mind the
continuing intransigent attitude of the BCCI regarding match fixing
and other related matters like the framing of the new code of conduct
for the players. "The BCCI seems to be under the impression that it is
above the laws of the land," he alleged. Reacting to Lele's statement
that the BCCI was not going to be guided by the government directives
on the evolution of the code of conduct, Azad said "the worst offender
in the present crisis is the BCCI, which has single handedly devalued
the game and presided over its crass commercialisation and corruption.
The BCCI is a high handed, arrogant body which imagines it is not
accountable to anybody and does not owe an explanation to anybody." He
alleged that the image of the game had suffered immensely at the hands
of the BCCI because of the match fixing controversy "which the board
has tried its best to sweep under the carpet." He pointed out that
while the Pakistan and South African boards reacted immediately to the
match fixing controversy, the BCCI appointed the Chandrachud committee
which was an "eyewash."
Azad's broadside is easily the most strident against the board. But
besides Bedi and Azad, even comparatively less outspoken cricketers
like MAK Pataudi and Chetan Chauhan have hinted that it is time the
government takes a closer look at the Board's functioning. This kind
of open and sustained criticism against the BCCI from the players is
something new. In the past, perhaps only Sunil Gavaskar repeatedly hit
out at the board in his regular column but even this was done in a
sarcastic vein. The BCCI has started mending fences with the
government, if Tuesday's meeting at New Delhi between board president
AC Muthiah and Sports Ministry officials is any indication. Perhaps
the time has come to mend fences with its more outspoken critics, the
former cricketers, a move that is a must for the betterment of the
game in the country.