Rival factions cause J&K player-selection chaos
With three weeks remaining for the start of the Ranji Trophy, Jammu & Kashmir cricket is mired in another controversy with warring factions claiming rights to pick squads for various domestic tournaments
Amol Karhadkar and Nagraj Gollapudi
09-Sep-2015
Farooq Abdullah lost the election held in July but was granted a stay order on the results • AFP
With three weeks remaining for the start of the Ranji Trophy 2015-16, Jammu & Kashmir cricket is mired in another controversy with warring factions claiming rights to pick squads for various domestic tournaments.
Players are being pulled in different directions by two rival factions, who have been conducting parallel selection trials and preparatory camps over the past month in Srinagar. While the newly elected body at Jammu and Kashmir Cricket Association, headed by J&K sports minister Iqbal Raza Ansari, has been conducting preparatory camps at the Sher-e-Kashmir stadium, the Farooq Abdullah group, which has managed to get a stay order on the elections results, has also announced parallel selection trials at the Kashmir University grounds. The confusion has left players concerned over their future.
Abdullah, the former chief minister and long-time head of JKCA, was defeated in the election in July, but still managed to get a stay on the election results. The J&K High Court is likely to pass an order on the issue this week, which would clear the confusion.
The players, however, are desperate for a clear direction. Samiullah Beigh, J&K's seniormost player and fast bowler, hoped for the BCCI's intervention. "It would be better if the BCCI comes up with a statement because players who are missing can then come and join us."
A BCCI official, however, clarified that the board cannot interfere in internal affairs of any of its member units. The BCCI, according to him, can only interfere if any of the aggrieved parties complain to them.
Barring two players - wicketkeeper Obaid Haroon and fast bowler Umar Nazir - majority of the players who featured in last year's Ranji squad have been reporting to the camp organised by the Ansari faction.
Beigh said that most of the players had been training at the camp for about a month. "We have been playing trial matches and training and attending fitness camps continuously at the Sher-e-Kashmir stadium for a month or so now."
Beigh agreed that the Abdullah faction had attempted to get players to attend the camp, but did not think the players were confused by the scenario: "No, because the preparations are going as usual at the JKCA headquarters and players are attending this."
Told about the BCCI official's reaction, one of the senior players, who requested anonymity, asked which faction the BCCI was supporting. "Who are they supporting? If the elections were held and the Ansari group has come to power how can the court overrule this?"
He also said that the Abdullah faction was trying to create stumbling blocks that did not exist. "The other faction is trying to create confusion by saying the Sher-e-Kashmir is not ready, and BCCI should displace all the home matches away. But we have played two-day and three-day trial matches for more than a month now. The conditions are perfect. There is no need for shifting the matches."
The Abdullah faction, on the other hand, blamed the Ansari group for creating confusion. "We have got a court order to stay the election, so they don't have any right to select the team. Just because they want to create confusion, they have organised selection trials and have announced Mithun Manhas as captain-coach. If Manhas wants to play, he will have to attend the official selection trials," ML Nehru, a member of the Abdullah faction, said.
Nehru, also a BCCI vice-president, claimed his group was taking players into confidence. "We have started our selection process and next week, the selection committee appointed by the executive committee will select the team for the Ranji Trophy. No doubt the players are confused but we have been doing our best to help them understand they need not worry about anything. Despite the two factions, there is only one official association and the players should to stick to the body," Nehru said.
Iqbal Shah, the general secretary elected during the July election and the spokesperson of the Ansari group, remained unavailable for a comment.
Another question that remains unanswered is who will coach the J&K team. Sunil Joshi, the former Karnataka and India left-arm spinner, was the coach last year. Despite playing all their home matches outside their state due to the preceding floods, J&K produced mixed results under Joshi. In the Vijay Hazare Trophy, J&K managed three wins in five games but finished last in Group A in the Ranji Trophy, winning just one game in eight matches.
Joshi, currently playing in the Karnataka Premier League, was also unavailable for comment. It is understood he is still looking forward to continuing his role as J&K coach. However the Ansari faction, it is learned, is looking forward to having former Delhi veteran Manhas play the mentor-cum-coach role. Manhas has been training with the players at Sher-e-Kashmir, but no formal announcement has yet been made about the coach and captain for the season.