19 August 1996
Sidhu affair spawns yet another committee
Prem Panicker
What started out as one of the biggest controversies - not to
mention cricketing tragedies - in recent history is rapidly degenerating into farce, as the Board of Control for Cricket in India appoints yet another committee to deal with the Navjot
Singh Sidhu affair.
First, Indian cricket`s apex body appointed a three-man committee
comprising Raj Singh Dungarpur, J Y Lele and Sunil Manohar
Gavaskar to probe the circumstances behind the abrupt departure
of the Indian batsman from England midway through the recent
tour. And now board president Inderjit Singh Bindra, former
president P M Rungta and former Test star Mohinder Amarnath will
comprise a three-man committee to ruminate on the report of that
earlier committee.
Whyfor?
As matters stood, the three-man enquiry committee had, after
listening to the testimony of Sidhu himself, skipper
Azharuddin, deputy Tendulkar, manager Patil and administrative
manager C Nagaraj, reported that there was no substance in
Sidhu`s earlier allegation that he had been singled out for
humiliation by his captain, and that his departure from England
was an emotional reaction from a hyper-sensitive individual.
Now comes committee number two - to read that report (which, incidentally, covers all of one fulscap page) and decide what to
do with it - and with Sidhu, while they are about it.
The board, of course, has its own reasons to justify this
seemingly method-less madness. "The committee has been constituted," says an official source, "in accordance with Clause 38
(ii) of the memorandum and rules and regulations of the
BCCI."
Er... to what purpose? "To decide what action, if any, to take
on the controversy," was the response.
Flashback: once the Dungarpur committee filed its report, the
board had asked Sidhu to show cause why he should not be disciplined for his walkout act during the England tour. Sidhu, by way
of response, had not shown any cause why he should not be acted against, but merely said that he was prepared to abide by
whatever decision the board takes.
So why this committee, you will ask. You shouldn`t - remember
"Clause 38 (ii)...." and all the rest of it?
The official word, meanwhile, is that Bindra, Rungta and Amarnath
will meet at Mohali (incidentally, Sidhu`s own home ground) on
August 25. Sidhu has been asked to ap- pear before it, the
spokesman says. And the committee will then decide what to do
with the Indian batsman.
Will the committee`s decision be final? "No," says the selfsame
spokesman. "It will submit a recommendation to the BCCI."
And judging by precedent, the board, presumably, will appoint
another committee to study that recommendation...
Meanwhile, Sidhu`s disciplining has already begun, with his
claim for inclusion in the upcoming Singer Cup and Sahara
Cup tournaments being shelved. "Sidhu`s inclusion in the Indian
side is subject to the board`s being satisfied with his reply
to the show cause notice," was the official comment by board
secretary Jagmohan Dalmiya, when the national team was announced
in Calcutta a week ago.
Newly appointed India skipper Sachin Tendulkar,
meanwhile, preferred to steer clear of all comment on the issue.
However, he did make one significant remark. "Sidhu will be a
great asset to the side when we tour the West Indies and South
Africa later this year," Tendulkar said in Madras.
Reading between those lines, the inference is clear. Already
dropped from the side for Sri Lanka and Canada, Sidhu will as
part of his punishment also sit out the upcoming one-off Test
against Australia, and the triangular one-day series that
will also involve South Africa, as part of his punishment for
being too flighty and temperamental for his own good.
And then, wind, weather and the various board committees past,
present and future permitting, the lanky Indian batsman will
probably do duty for the national side towards year-end.
Source :: Rediff On The NeT (https://www.rediff.co.in)