“So this is how liberty dies …
with thunderous applause” –Padme Amidala
If all boards eventually fall in
line to the new draft for running the ICC they will have willingly put back,
just after a couple of decades, the yoke
it took them a century to take off. Tragically, the process of returning to the
good old days is being led by one of those who were at one time in the fold
of the dispossesed with support from the
two pillars of the old guard. It seems that in their very nature the English
and the Australian cricket authorities never changed, always beleiving they
should be treated a cut above the rest. This was the time for these power
houses to have stood on the right side of the divide to remedy their past sins.
A board even as powerful as the BCCI, even though it may treaten to do so, cannot reasonably
contemplate to abandon the international game. It needs partners in the other
strong boards.
This is not only how Liberty dies
but also how Cricket dies. This is repeating the past mistakes of the MCC which
sacrificed the growth of the game at the international level at the alter of
its oracle. Which makes one wonder, where is this reformed society, the
supposed upholders of the spirit of the game in denouncing this dictatorship.
The MCC has stood on many minor issues which were of no or little import in the
name of the spirit of the game. This now is the time for them to stand and be
counted to save the soul of the game.
Where do the rest of the boards
stand?
Were CSA left out of the loop by
BCCI due to their rather strong dislike for Lorgat? Had CSA been offered a
share of the pie would they too have accepted the elite power sharing proposal?
Will they if it is offered now?
New Zealand cricket authorities
have always deffered to those from Australia and England and recently to the
will of the BCCI. Their submissiveness in the wake of the Howard nomination
when their own candidate was summarily put asunder – even though it was their
turn to have a go at the ICC top spot, and their submissiveness to the BCCI in
banning Bond when they had allowed him to play for the now defunct ICL are just
recent examples. Nothing better can be hoped.
West Indies which is in itself a
fractious bunch has a history of kowtowing to the MCC and then the English
position (except in the case of supporting appartheid cricket in South Africa)
will probably do so again.
Zimbabwe will probably follow the
BCCI money.
It would help if the other boards
clean up their act and improve their teams. In the test rankings if their were
other teams replacing some of India, Australia, and England in the top four it
would enhance their position.
On the strenth of it the
remaining boards, especially if CSA falls, may not be strong enough. They have
the ICC vote and one hopes they use it. They can discard the plan within the
ICC. If a division has to happen it must be a clean one. If the boards
supporting the draft wish to leave the ICC let them have their cake.

No comments:
Post a Comment