Officials, Former Players Ask BCCI to Abide by SC Order

Senior administrators and former players today asked the BCCI to abide by the suggestion of the Supreme Court which today made several proposals including stepping down of N Srinivasan as president and suspension of two IPL franchises.     

The SC proposed the replacement of Srinivasan by former captain Sunil Gavaskar and suspension of franchises Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals from IPL 7 till the pendency of the betting and spot fixing case.     

The apex court also proposed to pass an order barring India Cements officials from getting involved with the functioning of BCCI.     

Reacting to the development, BCCI Vice-President Ravi Sawant said that Srinivasan should not have been allowed to buy the Chennai Super Kings team in the IPL on the ground of conflict of interest.     

"The first mistake was to have allowed Srinivasan to buy Chennai Super Kings. There is conflict of interest. He should not have been allowed to buy CSK at that time," he said.     

Sawant, who is the BCCI vice-president from West Zone, said the Board will have to act according to the Supreme Court order.     

"The SC has given just one day and it has said it will pass its interim order tomorrow. So there is no time to call an emergency meeting of the Board. Whatever the SC says in its order tomorrow, we will have to abide by it. There is no other way," he added.     

Former captains Rahul Dravid, Krishnamachari Srikkanth and Anil Kumble said on the sidelines of a function in Bangalore that everybody will have to abide by the Supreme Court order.     

"The matter is subjudice. We don't know what is exactly happening. Till the Supreme Court comes out with its order, it is not proper to comment on the issue. The Supreme Court is supreme and everybody will have to follow what it says. There is no other way," Srikkanth said.     

"It's subjudice and we can comment only after the Supreme Court passes its order," Dravid said.

Kumble said whatever the Supreme Court orders, the Board and everybody has to follow as law-abiding citizens.     

"Beyond this, I can't comment on a matter which is subjudice. But the situation is no different for a cricketer. It's nothing new. Whatever is happening in cricket, we can see in the society also. Of course, we need to tackle this and clean up the game."     

Sawant has no direct answer on the proposal of the Supreme Court to replace Srinivasan by Gavaskar till the case in the IPL fixing and betting scandal is decided.     

"There is a procedure in the BCCI Constitution regarding the vacancy of the president. Whatever the SC has proposed I don't know whether it will fit with the BCCI Constitution or whether it (the SC order) will overwrite the Constitution of the BCCI."     

Former BCCI Secretary Niranjan Shah felt the rot in the BCCI has gone too far and the Board will now have to clean up the game before the public loses interest in it.    

"It's a bad day for BCCI. Things have gone far beyond and it will only hurt cricket a lot. But I think in the interest of cleaning up the game, may be the Supreme Court's observations are correct. Whatever the Supreme Court decides BCCI will have to abide by it," he said.     

"Most of the BCCI members are in dark about what is transpiring in the last 7-8 days. So, the BCCI should immediately, without any further delay, call Special General    Shah said it will now be difficult to hold the IPL 7 if the Supreme Court bars CSK and RR from taking part in it.     

"Now the question is different. Now there will be only six teams taking part in the IPL and it will be difficult. The BCCI should call Special General Body meeting and decide whether IPL 7 should be played or not," said Shah.     

Former treasurer Ajay Shirke blamed the BCCI members for bringing the Board to such a pass.     

"We have to wait for the Supreme Court's order but this is of great sorrow. I am extremely sad to see this day dawn upon an institution which has weathered 75-odd years of ups and downs and have come up on top several times," he said.     

"I think here we have a case where our president feels he is absolutely right and has done nothing wrong. That is his perception but the perception of the media and the entire world is different", he told Times Now.     

"I think the members have brought this situation upon BCCI and unless they really sit down and introspect and unless we do that it's going to be very difficult. You have to put the interest of of the institution above everything. There is no one who really stood up to that."     

Another vice-president Rajeev Shukla said he would comment only after the Supreme Court passes its order tomorrow.     

"We need to wait for the Supreme Court's final order. The Supreme Court has given some suggestions and there will be arguments on these suggestions tomorrow," he said.     

"Once the court gives its final verdict then only it will be wise to comment on this matter," he said.     

Former Indian captain Bishan Singh Bedi took to social networking site Twitter to express his dismay over the manner in which cricket has been shamed.    

"Heart reaches out 2 Aditya Verma fr steadfastly tkng on dictatorial Srini & coming on top!BCCI's image touch lowest possible denominator!!" Bedi tweeted.    

"Fr no rhyme or reason Srini gving a bad name 2 Rhinos! Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely--bcci has bn shamed!Thx SC save CI," he said in another tweet.

At the beginning of the proceedings, BCCI placed before the apex court its proposal and assured that it will initiate disciplinary proceedings against persons concerned on the basis of Supreme Court-appointed Mudgal committee's report.

BCCI, which was rapped day before yesterday by the apex court, came out with the proposal saying that it agrees to conduct proper probe in the IPL betting and spot fixing scandal.

Related Stories

No stories found.

X
The New Indian Express
www.newindianexpress.com