State associations to weigh in on Lodha report at SGM
The BCCI's state units are expected to give their views on the Lodha panel's report at the board's special general meeting in Mumbai on Friday

The BCCI SGM will consider recommendations like 'One state, one vote' and the age cap on administrators recommended by the Lodha panel • AFP
The panel's recommendation that only one association from a state should be given a vote has, predictably, drawn strong opposition from the western units, which comprise three associations each from Gujarat and Maharashtra. If the recommendation comes into effect, four of the six associations would be stripped of voting rights and reduced to the status of an associate member. All the associations, however, will be allowed to field teams and will remain eligible for grants.
ICC Board meetings also likely on the agenda
The BCCI will also hold an emergent meeting of its working committee before the SGM. The Lodha Committee's recommendations are expected to be the key theme in this meeting as well. A discussion on the recent ICC Board and committee meetings, which reviewed the world body's constitution and governance structures, is also expected to take place in the SGM, although the primary focus is expected to be on the Lodha report.
The proposal to bring the board under the purview of the Right to Information Act has been met with near-unanimous opposition from the BCCI's units. The implementation of this recommendation would require the BCCI to make public details of its activities.
The Lodha report disqualifies a person over the age of 70 from holding office or contesting elections in the BCCI. The panel also recommended that an office-bearer should not serve two consecutive terms - each must be broken by a "cooling-off" period. The first recommendation would make it untenable for the likes of Sharad Pawar, N Srinivasan and Niranjan Shah to continue as heads of their respective state bodies. "When the Indian political system doesn't prescribe any age-limit for those who can contest elections why target the BCCI alone?" a board official asked. Another official said that a cooling-off period would hamper continuity in administration.
This recommendation, according to a few officials, would add to the difficulties of administering state associations. "It is not right to paint all politicians with the same brush," the president of a state association said. He said that the presence of a minister or a bureaucrat helped overcome administrative roadblocks. "When you try to organise a match, there are many issues to handle that involve the police, corporation, commercial taxes and other aspects of state machinery," he said. "You need somebody to shield you, and also a politician or a bureacrat's administrative abilities cannot be discounted."
Although this recommendation isn't a direct challenge to any of the state associations many officials have raised concerns over the consequent shrinking of revenue to the board. An official said that if the revenue earned from the sale of broadcast rights falls it would have a direct impact on the state associations. "The BCCI has managed to create state-of-the-art facilities in many places with the revenue earned from TV rights," the official said. "This would slow down all work related to infrastructure development."
Arun Venugopal is a correspondent at ESPNcricinfo