NCA gives green signal to four more zonal academies
The National Cricket Academy Committee cleared the decks for the setting up of four more zonal academies at their meeting in Mumbai on Monday
Staff and Agencies
16-Apr-2001
The National Cricket Academy Committee cleared the decks for the
setting up of four more zonal academies at their meeting in Mumbai on
Monday. The Vidarbha, Punjab and Maharashtra Cricket Associations,
besides the Cricket Club of India in Mumbai, will run these academies
for trainees in the Under-14 and Under-16 age groups.
Former Board President and Chairman of the NCA Committee, Raj Singh
Dungarpur, told PTI that the CCI will select 20 trainees from around
the country and utilise their own (club) funds, while the other three
associations would select boys from their respective zones and get a
50% subsidy from the board.
"The BCCI has also agreed to start a National Cricket Museum which
will chronicle the milestones of Indian cricket from 1940s to 2001
called 'From C K Nayudu to Sachin Tendulkar' over 8,500 square feet of
built-up space next to the BCCI office at the Brabourne Stadium"
added Dungarpur.
The five zonal academies already sanctioned are based at Mumbai,
Kolkata, Chennai, Delhi and Kanpur. They were scheduled to begin their
sessions from April 20 but Dungarpur revealed that the launch date has
now been postponed to May 1, after the completion of annual
examinations all over the country.
Meanwhile former former Services and Bihar wicketkeeper Daljit Singh
has declined the post of the NCA's North Zone chief coach. BCCI Vice
President C K Khanna said in Delhi on Monday he got intimation to this
effect from the Board adding that the selection of trainees would now
be made after the BCCI working committee sorts out the issue at its
meeting in the capital on April 24.
Khanna refused to react to reports that the job for which Daljit Singh
had been chosen was now being offered to former Test cricketer Yashpal
Sharma. Sharma himself, when reached, said the only intimation he had
in writing was that he had been appointed as one of the coaches for
North Zone. "I don't know anything beyond that," he told PTI.
According to Board sources, the whole matter of the North Zone academy
had become confusing with news that Mohali, the original choice for
the zonal academy and ignored in favour of Delhi, would now get to
train cricketers under 14 and 16. "What is left for Delhi then?" asked
a Delhi cricket official.