In August 2009, Delhi captain Virender Sehwag, fed up with selection-related corruption in local cricket, almost quit the national capital and said he might switch to Haryana, the state of his ancestors. His patience had run out with 바카라too much interference and manipulation바카라 in selection of the various Delhi teams. It took then Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) president Arun Jaitley바카라Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi had argued Sehwag바카라s case바카라to persuade the aggrieved batsman to stay back by making a slew of promises to cleanse cricket.
Those promises were, of course, unkept; in the last ten years, the capital바카라s cricket, on and off the field, has slipped deeper into the abyss, as evidenced by the assault on the chairman of the senior selection committee a few days ago. A frustrated player who was ignored for the Delhi team and his cohorts thrashed Amit Bhandari with bats, rods and chains during a trial match at a venue with no security. The attack left the former India pacer with five stitches in his head, and a bruised back and shin.
The condemnable act comes at a time of Delhi바카라s abysmal performance in various men바카라s and women바카라s national tournaments. Yet, given that cricket is such a high stakes affair now, some people are not surprised at the assault, as transparency and accountability in selection and administration바카라promised by the DDCA in 2009바카라still remain a distant dream. A TV sting aired on February 20 shows Bihar and Jharkhand officials demanding money for selecting players.
Selection issues, which comprise constant pressure on selectors, is a nationwide phenomenon. 바카라What has happened in Delhi is not uncommon; it바카라s happening almost all over India, in varying degrees. Money is playing a very important role in many issues. This is what we바카라ll have to possibly live with. All we can do is to restrain ourselves to such an extent that we are honest,바카라 Kishen Rungta, 86, a former chairman of the national selection committee from Rajasthan, tells Outlook.
Former India wicket-keeper Kiran More, an ex-chairman of the national and Baroda selections panels, agrees. 바카라At the national level, there바카라s no pressure at all. At the local level, the pressure is more and different. Earlier it was not so but now, not only in Baroda, but in other states as well, it바카라s more,바카라 says Baroda-based More.
One of the primary reasons for growing pressure on selectors from players, parents and coaches is the ever rising stakes in Indian cricket. The eagerness to invest in the sport is so much now바카라and the rewards so rich바카라that players, parents and coaches want their wards to get into teams at all costs, even if that means taking an illegitimate, immoral route. They first try using their personal rappport with selectors. If that doesn바카라t succeed, they lure the selectors with cash and 바카라kind바카라, which, at times, includes sexual favours.
In 2006, all-rounder Navdeep Tomar was included as an extra player in the Delhi team for the Ranji Trophy, leading to the sacking of the entire selection panel. Then, in 2015, Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal sensationally alleged that sexual favours were asked from the wife of a senior Delhi journalist in return for her son바카라s selection in a junior Delhi team. Last year, in a sting operation, the personal assistant of a director of the UP Cricket Association was heard seeking from a player girls for himself and his friend in return for a place in the state team. An inquiry by a former judge absolved the personal assistant of 바카라fixing바카라 selection.
If all attempts to slip in underserving players into a team fails, political pressure is exerted. And, as a last resort, when a dishonest player finally, and grudgingly, accepts the end of his career and quits, he resorts to muscle power to 바카라teach바카라 selectors a lesson. Delhi pacer Anuj Dheda (subsequently banned for life from all cricket in Delhi), along with his friends, was trying that against Bhandari.
Former Mumbai selector and batsman Shishir Hattangadi terms the Bhandari incident frightening and predicts a dark future for selectors. 바카라With the stakes getting higher this kind of incident is something one would expect, and one needs to be vigilant about the way players operate. While counselling for players is needed, more important is to restore the culture of the game,바카라 Hattangadi says.
Today, the value of success from a career in cricket is set so high that no player can countenance a denial of a piece of the rich cricket pie, especially with the kind of money that the lucrative IPL offers to all stakeholders, not just players. But, if a player fails to live his IPL dream, he can still earn a handsome amount by merely playing in the BCCI바카라s cash-rich tournaments. A player receives Rs 35,000 a day in all senior men바카라s tournaments, Rs 17,500 a day in the under-23 competition, Rs 10,500 a day in under-19 tourneys and an under-16 boy receives Rs 3,500 for a day바카라s exertions on the field.
If a male cricketer goes on to represent India, he receives a handsome Rs 15 lakh for each Test, and Rs 6 lakh and Rs 3 lakh for ODIs and T20 Internationals respectively. Additionally, over 30 top players are annually contracted for slabs of Rs 7 crore, Rs 5 crore, Rs 3 crore and Rs 1 crore.
The fee structure for women is not bad either. In senior tournaments, the daily fee is Rs 12,500, while for under-23, under-19 and under-16 it is Rs 5,500 a day. For an ODI and a T20 International, a player gets Rs 1 lakh. The slabs for the annual contracts for women are Rs 50 lakh, Rs 30 lakh and Rs 10 lakh. The BCCI also pays attractive bonuses for exceptional successes to both men바카라s and women바카라s teams and coaching/support staff.
With so much money on offer, who would not like to be part of the cricket jamboree? In some INStances, players get swayed by the razzmatazz of the IPL and therefore indulge in undesirable acts to get in. There have been murmurs over the years of some cricketers 바카라returning바카라 a certain part of their contract fee back to certain franchisee officials as a 바카라bribe바카라 for picking them.
Amid such high store being set for cricketing success, selectors are under massive pressure, be it in domestic cricket or the IPL. Many former selectors like Madan Lal, Sanjay Jagdale, Lalchand Rajput, and Rajinder Singh Hans admit that both friends and strangers had approached them to take a look at certain players. But, they insist, they never went out of their way to accommodate those requests.
바카라People know who to approach and who not to. They would never approach people like Bishan Bedi and Kapil Dev. Some people did approach me, but only with the request to 바카라iss bachche ko dekh lena바카라 (take a look at my ward). At times, even Kapil has asked to me to take a look at certain boys, but for my own academy, not for any representative team,바카라 Madan Lal tells Outlook.
Some friends of Jagdale, too, had sought his help. 바카라If your concept is clear you won바카라t feel any pressure; I never felt that as a national selector. Although a few of my friends wanted me to 바카라take a look바카라 at their sons who aspired to play for Madhya Pradesh when I was state selector, I didn바카라t oblige and that affected our relationship,바카라 says the man who was Central Zone바카라s representative on the national panel for seven years (2000-01 to 2007-08).
Rajinder Singh Hans, another Central Zone man on the national panel, says he faced no issues as a selector. 바카라I never encouraged anyone. If you oblige one player, next year you would be compelled to oblige two바카라the number grows,바카라 says the former left-arm spinner who coached Uttar Pradesh to their only Ranji Trophy title in 2005-06.
Current Zimbabwe national coach Lalchand Rajput makes an interesting point on how to deflect pressure. 바카라Pressure is always there on selectors, players and coaches. But as a selector, the more matches you watch, the less you바카라ll depend on others for selection, as you could judge players for yourself. I never had any problem as a Mumbai selector. But after what happened to Bhandari, it seems even selectors would now need bodyguards,바카라 says the former India opening batsman.
What makes the issue complex is that even players at times get a raw deal from selectors. Talented Hyderabad off-spinner Kawaljeet Singh was one such player who never got his due, but didn바카라t resort to unfair means. 바카라I know what kind of agitation and frustration one goes through on being overlooked. It바카라s devastating. Very few recover from that blow. There바카라s a lot of political pressure on selectors. In my case, I was either too young or too old for the selectors,바카라 says the genial 60-year-old who as a youngster competed with fellow Hyderabadi off-spinners Shivlal Yadav and Arshad Ayub, both of whom went on to represent India.
Hattangadi, who quit as Mumbai selector mid-season in 2009 over the inclusion of two players without his knowledge, makes a telling point. 바카라The cricketing vote plays a big part in selectors바카라 appointment. Generally, when a selector is appointed he바카라s made aware that you are supported by X, Y or Z. So, there바카라s a comfort level for people who believe that they were responsible for your appointment and thus have access to you to recommend individuals. If you are not strong enough, you may succumb to pressure,바카라 he says.
Rungta, however, has the last word on how to make the process transparent바카라have live telecast of selection committee meetings. 바카라That way each player would know where he stands and he will be open to correction or clarification if there is a misconception about him. It will show the calibre and honesty of selectors,바카라 he said of a suggestion he first made 22 years ago.
In these 22 years, Indian cricket has undergone a sea change, particularly with the launch of the IPL in 2008. That was the game-changing year, both for good and for worse. But, as Rungta says, we will have to live with it.