NEW DELHI - Batting legend Sunil Gavaskar said he was willing to take
the helm of India's embattled cricket board Thursday after a proposal by
the Supreme Court designed to stem the damage from a betting scandal.
At a dramatic hearing in New Delhi, a panel of judges also called for
the banning of two teams from this year's Indian Premier League (IPL),
in a potentially devastating blow to a tournament which begins next
month.
After warning the incumbent N. Srinivasan that they could
order him to quit, the judges proposed 64-year-old Gavaskar take over on
an interim basis as president of the Board of Control for Cricket in
India. "In the place of Srinivasan, we propose to appoint an experienced
cricket player like Sunil Gavaskar to replace him and function as BCCI
president," said Justice A.K. Patnaik, the panel's chairman.
Gavaskar,
the first player ever to score 10,000 runs in Test match cricket and
who is now a television commentator, said he was up for the challenge of
leading the most powerful body in world cricket. "The fact that I am
contracted to the BCCI to do TV commentary has to be put on record," he
told the NDTV network. "After that if the honourable Supreme Court tells
you to do something, then of course ... if they ask me to do something,
I will do it. As an opening batsman, you must be ready for all kinds of
challenges. I will do everything to the best of my abilities. If the
highest court is reposing this faith in me, I'll be very happy to do
what they ask me to do." There was no immediate reaction from Srinivasan
but his counsel had earlier told the court he was willing to "step
aside". But he first wanted to know how long an ongoing investigation
would continue.
Call for IPL ban:
The panel is looking at a
damning report it commissioned into wrongdoing in last year's tournament
when former Test bowler Shanthakumaran Sreesanth was caught
deliberately bowling badly while playing for the Rajasthan Royals in
return for thousands of dollars from bookmakers.
Released in
February, the report also concluded that Srinivasan's son-in-law
Gurunath Meiyappan -- who was the team principal of the Chennai Super
Kings -- could be guilty of illegal betting on IPL games. The Super
Kings are owned by India Cements, whose managing director is Srinivasan.
The team are captained by India skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni.
In the
light of the allegations involving the two teams, the judges said they
should not be allowed to take part in this year's tournament. "We are
not removing anyone now, but Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals
will not be allowed to participate in the IPL which commences on April
16," added Patnaik.
Such a ban would represent a massive blow to the
eight-team IPL, which begins next month in the United Arab Emirates. The
start of this year's tournament has been relocated as India is holding a
general election. Samit Bal, editor-in-chief of the influential website
Cricinfo, predicted this year's tournament would be scrapped. "I can't
see the tournament going ahead with six teams," said Bal. "It's just not
going to work, and it might not be such a bad thing if IPL is not
played this year under the cloud that there would be... It's not a
question of money, it's a question of credibility."
On Tuesday, the
court had urged Srinivasan to stand down as president of the board to
enable a "fair" investigation into the allegations. Aditya Verma,
secretary of Cricket Association of Bihar and a petitioner in the case,
welcomed the court's recommendations on Thursday.
Cleaning the dirt:
"The
court has taken a very important first step towards cleaning the dirt
that has creeped into Indian cricket," he told reporters. "We have no
problem if Gavaskar is made the interim chief. He is a man of integrity
and principles." Gavaskar is also a strident newspaper columnist and has
been at the forefront of calls for India coach Duncan Fletcher's
sacking.
Srinivasan had been regarded as the most powerful man in
world cricket and is still due to take over in July as head of the
International Cricket Council. With its massive TV audiences, India
generates almost 70 percent of the game's revenues and several of the
smaller Test nations are heavily dependent on its largesse. The Indian
team are currently in Bangladesh for the World T20 tournament but
Thursday's events were off-limits at a press conference. "We are really
not bothered about what is happening away from the game," batsman Rohit
Sharma told reporters"
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