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"Shocked to see that BCCI has rejected all major reforms" : Justice RM Lodha [Update Post #19]

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"Shocked to see that BCCI has rejected all major reforms" : Justice RM Lodha [Update Post #19]

The Supreme Court said on Wednesday it will not allow the BCCI to defy orders, reacting to a status report submitted by the RM Lodha Committee that sought the ouster of the Indian cricket board’s top brass, including president Anurag Thakur.

The panel for cricket reforms requested the apex court to declare ineffective decisions taken by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) that violates an earlier order.

In its annual general meeting on September 21, the board flouted the panel’s guidelines in several decisions, including the formation of a new cricketer selection committee.

“SC will not allow BCCI to defy court orders. We will pass appropriate orders to set you right,” Chief Justice TS Thakur told senior counsel Arvind Dattar, who represented BCCI during earlier hearings. Dattar was present in the court for another matter.

“You (BCCI) are not a law unto yourself. Fall in line otherwise we will make you fall in line,” the bench said, giving the board time till October 6 to respond to report.

A bench headed by Thakur was hearing the matter, and became livid when told of the BCCI’s stand.

If it could defy the Supreme Court, then allegations of irregularity in the board could be true, the court said, rebuking the board.

The Lodha panel was formed by the court after the 2013 Indian Premier League (IPL) spot-fixing scandal. Headed by former Chief Justice RM Lodha, the panel suggested several changes in reforming the world’s richest cricket body.

The Supreme Court approved of the recommendations on July 18, and directed the BCCI to implement them. The cricket board filed a review petition against the order, which is still under scrutiny in the top court.

The board called an emergency meeting on September 30 to discuss the implementation of the recommendations.

Lodha Committee had set the BCCI two deadlines: September 30 to make constitutional changes and December 15 to form a nine-member apex committee that will replace the working committee.

Source : http://www.hindustantimes.com/sport...mmendations/story-HXGmv8yYQyC473H2DEAULP.html
 
The GoI can crush the BCCI in a day.

It just so happens that the BCCI hasn't trodden on their feet yet.
 
The GoI can crush the BCCI in a day.

It just so happens that the BCCI hasn't trodden on their feet yet.

The BCCI is this giant cash producing machine. The government gets its share by having politicians obtaining positions in it. I don't think anyone wants to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.
 
I doubt even the Supreme Court/GOI/UN/NASA or Justice League could do anything once Srini mama returns :srini

So the anti BCCI brigade should calm down :abdv
 
The BCCI is this giant cash producing machine. The government gets its share by having politicians obtaining positions in it. I don't think anyone wants to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs.

The BCCI is anything but a goose that lays golden eggs.

Don't forget that the BCCI owes all its money and clout to the millions of cricket fans in India. These poor chaps spend their hard earned money buying tickets and filling up stadiums or sit glued to televisions during cricket matches. This ensures that the BCCI can earn billions by selling telecast rights. These rights, in turn, go for a premium and are highly sought after due to the advertising revenue.

The BCCI is an organization that can be dispensed with entirely. They are thriving simply by standing on the shoulders of Indian cricket fans, who are not going to stop spending their money on cricket, BCCI or no BCCI. The Indian government or the SC should dissolve the BCCI and create another board run by former cricketers. Only this will put arrogant and corrupt thugs like Thakur and Srini in their places.
 
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the bcci is anything but a goose that lays golden eggs.

Don't forget that the bcci owes all its money and clout to the millions of cricket fans in india. These poor chaps spend their hard earned money buying tickets and filling up stadiums or sit glued to televisions during cricket matches. This ensures that the bcci can earn billions by selling telecast rights. These rights, in turn, go for a premium and are highly sought after due to the advertising revenue.

The bcci is an organization that can be dispensed with entirely. They are thriving simply by standing on the shoulders of indian cricket fans, who are not going to stop spending their money on cricket, bcci or no bcci. The indian government or the sc should dissolve the bcci and create another board run by former cricketers. Only this will put arrogant and corrupt morons like thakur and srini in their places.

potw.
 
The BCCI is anything but a goose that lays golden eggs.

Don't forget that the BCCI owes all its money and clout to the millions of cricket fans in India. These poor chaps spend their hard earned money buying tickets and filling up stadiums or sit glued to televisions during cricket matches. This ensures that the BCCI can earn billions by selling telecast rights. These rights, in turn, go for a premium and are highly sought after due to the advertising revenue.

The BCCI is an organization that can be dispensed with entirely. They are thriving simply by standing on the shoulders of Indian cricket fans, who are not going to stop spending their money on cricket, BCCI or no BCCI. The Indian government or the SC should dissolve the BCCI and create another board run by former cricketers. Only this will put arrogant and corrupt thugs like Thakur and Srini in their places.

I didn't mean to defend BCCI, and it is true that the money comes from the cricket fans. A goose can lay eggs while pecking on unfortunates.
 
Lodha panel continues attack on BCCI; wants former home secretary as observer

http://indianexpress.com/article/sp...ts-former-home-secretary-as-observer-4388518/

The Lodha Committee in its latest status report before the Supreme Court, submitted on Monday, has asked for the removal of all BCCI office-bearers and the appointment of former home secretary GK Pillai as observer to preside over the functioning of the cricket board. The panel doesn’t mind the BCCI CEO (Rahul Johri) carrying out the day-to-day operations, but wants an observer to oversee the cricket board’s administration, especially with reference to the “award of contracts, transparency norms, and audit”. The Committee, in its first status report (submitted on September 28), had asked for replacing the present cricket board office-bearers with a group of independent administrators.

The court, however, had rejected the plea, observing that it would be an “extreme option”. It stopped the BCCI’s funds disbursement to state associations instead. The latest recommendation appears less intrusive, for the cricket board’s CEO would still be at the helm of affairs, supervised by an observer. The Committee has recommended the removal of the office-bearers who should be “disqualified” as per the apex court’s July 18 order – those who do not meet the approved criteria specified in the Lodha panel report. The judgment had accepted the majority of the recommendations proposed by the Supreme Court-appointed Committee.

The Committee seeks the following directions from this Hon’ble Court:

1. Direct and declare that all Office Bearers of the BCCI and the State Associations who are disqualified by virtue of the norms at Para 4 above (removal clauses) cease to hold office forthwith.

2. Direct that all administrative and management matters be carried out by the CEO of the BCCI without advertence to the Office Bearers.

3. Appointment of Mr GK Pillai, former Union Home Secretary as the Observer of the BCCI to supervise the administration of the BCCI by the CEO and empower the Committee to appoint all necessary secretarial staff, assistance and fix remuneration as may be determined appropriate; and

4. Any other direction as may be deemed fit for the implementation of the judgment dated 18.7.2016,” the Committee mentioned in its report, while reiterating the cricket board’s “continued non-compliance” in following the recommendations in toto.

As per the Lodha Committee recommendations, approved by the court, an office-bearer of the BCCI or its affiliates stands disqualified upon reaching 70 years of age or serving office for a cumulative period of nine years. A minister or government servant is also debarred from holding any office in cricket administration.

On September 30, the cricket board had called a general body meeting to discuss the implementation of the panel’s recommendations. The meeting had to be deferred to October 1 due to technical reasons. At the meeting, BCCI secretary Ajay Shirke had proposed the absolute implementation of the Lodha Committee recommendations, which was seconded by the cricket board president Anurag Thakur. But all member associations save Vidarbha Cricket Association and Tripura Cricket Association opposed the motion. Another meeting on October 15, too, failed to resolve the impasse. Both Thakur and Shirke described the sequence of events in their respective affidavits before the Committee. On Sunday, however, Hyderabad Cricket Association became the third BCCI affiliate to embrace the Lodha reforms.

The Committee, meanwhile, has taken strong exception to the BCCI’s “defiance”. “Several Office Bearers at both the BCCI and the State Associations continue to hold the posts although they stand disqualified as per the Order of this Hon’ble Court. It is submitted that those individuals who fall foul of these norms be declared to cease to hold office forthwith,” it said in its third status report.

“While the day to day administration of the BCCI is presently carried out by the CEO and certain Managers who assist him in this regard, there would be a need to appoint an Observer who would guide the BCCI in its administration, particularly with reference to the award of contracts, transparency norms, audit, etc., for domestic, international and IPL cricket to be played hereafter,” it added.

In its October 21 order, the Supreme Court directed the Committee to appoint an independent auditor and set a threshold limit for the BCCI contracts. It also asked Thakur and Shirke to submit an “affidavit of compliance”, elaborating the recommendations that have been implemented and explaining the difficulties they are facing for certain clauses. The affidavits were duly submitted before the Committee, along with draft the minutes of the SGMs. The BCCI officials were certainly not expecting another stinging status report.

“It seems like the Lodha Committee is not interested in finding a solution to the problems. It seems that the Hon’ble Supreme Court wants the game to run smoothly, but the Committee thinks otherwise. It even called for the cancellation of the England series during the last court hearing. As per the court order, the Committee was supposed to appoint an auditor at the earliest and set a threshold value. It hasn’t done that yet and (without money) cricket in India is coming to a grinding halt,”
a BCCI office-bearer told this paper demanding anonymity.

“The Lodha Committee recommendations disallow a government servant to become a BCCI office-bearer. At the same time, the panel is proposing that a former Union home secretary be appointed as observer,”
he added.

Asked about the appointment of an independent auditor, a Lodha panel official said: “After the BCCI implements the Supreme Court judgment, the Committee will take a decision.” The next hearing is scheduled on December 5.
 
CoA to come down hard on BCCI

The Committee of Administrators (CoA) will submit a status report before the Supreme Court based on the outcome of the BCCI’s Special General Meeting (SGM) in Mumbai on Monday. The Administrators — Vinod Rai (chairman), Vikram Limaye and Diana Eduljee — will not wait for the cricket board’s seven-member ‘special committee’, formed on Tuesday, to file its report by July 10.

The SGM on Monday had the adoption of the new constitution as per the Lodha Committee recommendations as Item No.1 on the agenda. But the members once again decided to drag their feet on the reforms, resulting in a stalemate. The “reluctance” hasn’t gone down well with the CoA.

“Of course, the CoA will not wait (for the BCCI committee report). They will have to file the status report at least five working days before the court meets, so it doesn’t matter what the BCCI committee suggests. The Administrators will not wait for anything. They got a clear indication yesterday and will go ahead,” a source close to the CoA told The Indian Express. The next hearing is scheduled on July 14.

During its meetings with the state associations on Sunday, the CoA had told the members to adopt the new constitution, assuring them that the Committee would be sympathetic about a few practical points. The members had also been told that defiance might force the CoA to file a status report, requesting the court to impose the new constitution upon the BCCI. “All these (decisions at the SGM) have made things much, much easier for the CoA now. Now they don’t have to do any tightrope walking; trying to even convince the court about practical things like three selectors, one state-one vote and all that. Things have now become very simple.

“The CoA spent a lot of time, trying to build a consensus. Now it has become much easier for them to convince the court about what they want. They have been very sympathetic about two-three practical points. The members had all the opportunities, which they wasted,” said the source.

Meanwhile, the BCCI on Tuesday formed a seven-member ‘special committee’ comprising Rajeev Shukla (chairman), Sourav Ganguly, TC Mathew, Naba Bhattacharjee, Jay Shah, Anirudh Chaudhry (BCCI treasurer) and Amitabh Choudhary (acting secretary, BCCI and convener) “to identify the few critical points in respect of the said judgment (July 18, 2016 Supreme Court order) for the General Body of the BCCI to consider before its submission to the Hon’ble Supreme Court”.

The committee will submit its report to the cricket board’s acting president CK Khanna, who, in turn, will place it before the general body for final approval. Khanna hasn’t been included in the committee because his wife is recuperating from a major surgery and it would be difficult for him to attend the meetings on a day-to-day basis. The acting president, however, “will be apprised on a regular basis”.

But the fact of the matter is that even some BCCI functionaries don’t seem too convinced. “It’s unlikely that this committee will do some magic in 10 days. Nineteen state associations have filed their respective affidavits before the court, citing reservations over certain clauses in the Lodha Committee recommendations. It would be very difficult for them to re-evaluate and change their affidavits midway,” a cricket board official told this paper.

http://indianexpress.com/article/sports/cricket/coa-to-come-down-hard-on-bcci-4725384/
 
Hahaha this CoA is worse than some of the worst BCCI administrations

Talk about killing the only sport making money in India. SMH ,what is even surprising is that it has come at a time of the biggest pro capitalist government ever,which is even disinvesting Air India :facepalm:
 
N. Srinivasan barred by Supreme Court from attending BCCI meetings

N. Srinivasan, former BCCI president and representative of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association (TNCA) has been barred by the Supreme Court from attending cricket board meetings. Along with Srinivasan, Niranjan Shah, who is a member of the special committee formed for the implementation of the Lodha Panel reforms, has also been barred.

N. Srinivasan, who had to step down as BCCI boss in the wake of the 2013 IPL spot-fixing and betting scandal, has been violating Lodha committee recommendations on age and tenure guidelines. The reforms suggested by the Justice Lodha panel says no official above the age of 70 should participate in BCCI matters.

Effectively, Srinivasan, who has been in the forefront of blocking Lodha recommendations on BCCI, will not be able to attend the BCCI Special General Meeting (SGM) on July 26. The Supreme Court only BCCI office-bearers may attend the SGM.

Reacting to the development, BCCI secretary Amitabh Choudhary told Hindustan Times in London: “It is the honourable Supreme Court of India; its orders would be binding. As the order says, in the general body meeting which will happen on the 26th, only those persons who are office bearers of the member unit associations can participate.

“So naturally there will be exclusion of some and inclusion of others. Whether it will smoothen the process or not, I can assure you that irrespective of who attends I think there is enough collective wisdom. In the next meeting in any case we would have reached a solution. This is the order of the Supreme Court and we will follow it”.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court asked the BCCI to adopt the Lodha Panel suggestions as far as “practicable” in the July 26 SGM. However, the top court may review the one-state-one-vote recommendation.

The announcement from the Supreme Court came after the top court had sought a response from both N. Srinivasan and Niranjan Shah after Committee of Administrators head Vinod Rai had complained that both had been attending the SGM despite being qualified.

In response, Niranjan Shah and N Srinivasan criticised Vinod Rai and accused him of targeting them alone.

At the start of July, the Committee of Administrators, in a status report submitted to the Supreme Court, lambasted Srinivasan and Niranjan Shah and said, “Such disqualified persons have a vested interest in stalling implementation of the Judgment.” Both Srinivasan and Niranjan Shah were officially raising objections against the scheduling of the SGM.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/crick...preme-court/story-gKAMMvz7dLi82TwO5QZzoJ.html
 
BCCI not interested in reforms: Justice RM Lodha

NEW DELHI: Justice RM Lodha is shocked at the dilution of his recommendations by the BCCI members. "I am shocked to see that the BCCI has rejected all the major reforms again. The heart, kidney, lungs are being taken out if these reforms. It's a comprehensive report prepared by the committee and by removing the vital organs, nothing remains in the suggested reforms. I don't know what is happening," Justice Lodha told TOI on Wednesday.

"What is the point in deliberating when the verdict is already given by the Supreme Court? I don't understand where is the possibility of changing the recommendations when all the review petitions have been rejected," he lamented.

When asked about the road ahead, Lodha said the apex court will perhaps take a call very soon as the job of the Lodha Committee was only to prepare those recommendations for reforms and it has no power to implement them.

"If the BCCI rejects reforms like the powers of the executives and the size of the apex council, it means BCCI is not interested in implementing the reforms at all. I am sure the honourable Supreme Court will take a look at it very soon," Lodha added.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ms-justice-rm-lodha-/articleshow/59783808.cms
 
India’s court raps BCCI for inaction on reforms

NEW DELHI: India’s highest court on Wednesday accused top officials from the country’s cricket board of failing to clean up the scandal-ridden body, more than six months after they pledged to enforce reforms.

The Supreme Court ordered that the acting president, secretary and treasurer of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) appear before a panel of judges on Sept 19 to explain their inaction.

“You haven’t implemented anything despite our orders. Nothing has been complied [with] and the BCCI says it’s helpless,” the panel of three judges, headed by Justice Dipak Misra, said in its order.

The board, a powerful and wealthy institution in cricket-mad India, was placed under court administration in January after a string of high-profile scandals brought its management into disrepute.

A panel appointed to reform its opaque administration was given an undertaking from the acting president, secretary and treasurer that they would turn things around.

But the court-appointed Committee of Administrators last week said the trio should be removed for failing to implement any of their promised reforms.

The board has been accused over its management of the Indian Premier League, a glitzy Twenty20 competition that netted almost $380 million in revenue in 2016.

The sixth season of the lucrative franchise was marred in 2013 by a match-fixing scandal when the son-in-law of then-BCCI president Narayanaswami Srinivasan was accused of gambling on matches.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1353455/indias-court-raps-bcci-for-inaction-on-reforms
 
Does the Indian Courts not have enough on their plate as far as dealing with crimes, murders etc is concerned...

Why have they spent so much time trying to regulate a sports body is beyond my understanding..
 
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