BCCI ethics officer serves conflict notice to Kapil-led Cricket Advisory Committee

The BCCI Ethics Officer, Justice (retd.) DK Jain, has served a notice to all three members on the Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC) led by Kapil Dev, asking them to explain the alleged conflict of interest charge pressed by Sanjeev Gupta, a life member of the Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association.

Justice Jain has asked all three CAC members to respond to the charge by October 10 failing which the Ethics Officer would be forced to draw his own conclusion.In his complaint to Justice Jain, Gupta pointed out that all three CAC members have multiple conflicts.

Kapil is part of the steering committee on the newly formed, BCCI-funded Indian Cricketers’ Association (ICA). He is also one of its directors. Kapil also works as an expert for Indian television channels. As for Anshuman Gaekwad, it is alleged that in addition to working as a pundit on TV, he is also part of the BCCI’s Member Affiliation Committee, which grants membership to state associations. Gaekwad, too, is part of the ICA’s steering group, as is the third member, Shantha Rangaswamy, who is also an ICA director.

Gupta had sent his complaint to Justice Jain immediately after the Committee of Administrators (CoA) had appointed former Indian cricketers Kapil, Gaekwad and Rangaswamy as the CAC to shortlist and appoint a head coach for the Indian men’s team. The CAC had re-appointed Ravi Shastri in that position till 2021 T20 World Cup.

Gupta had pressed similar charges against the members of the previous CAC – Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman – for carrying out multiple roles within the board, when the rules dictate that one person could hold just one position in Indian cricket. During the hearing of the case, Tendulkar submitted that he had decided not to be part of any BCCI committee so Justice Jain let him off. But he did uphold the charges against Ganguly and Laxman.

Even the appointment of th Kapil-led CAC had not been straightforward. It was assembled for the first time late last year to pick the Indian woman’s head coach, with former Tamil Nadu captain and India opener WV Raman eventually taking charge.

However, Diana Edulji, former India woman’s team captain, who is part of the Committee of Administrators overseeing the BCCI, expressed her dissatisfaction with the entire process and asked the BCCI ombudsman – who happens to be Justice Jain – to intervene. There has been no final verdict on that matter as yet.

Once Gupta had filed conflict charges against Kapil, Gaekwad and Ramaswamy, Edulji told her fellow CoA members – Vinod Rai and Ravindra Thodge – that all three CAC members should first give a written undertaking before proceeding to pick the men’s head coach.

Source: ESPN Crickinfo

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *