A 'new world order' in the ICC?
Sanjay Suri
After days of citing the rule books in support of its
match referee Mike Denness, the International Cricket Council, the
game's governing body, is beginning to realise it has another contest on
hands whose rules have not been written.
Over the past few days, the ICC has begun to see cricketing divisions
settling along a divide between white and non-white countries and the
developing and the developed world.
World cricket plunged into what seems to be a major crisis after the Indian
and South African cricket boards defied the ICC in removing Denness as match
referee. Denness was removed at India's insistence after he ruled Indian
batting hero Sachin Tendulkar guilty of ball tampering.
Denness also penalised five other Indian players for various misdemeanours.
India claimed that the decisions were biased.
Political colours are becoming visible as much as racial colours. So
political a battle it is beginning to seem now that one commentator in
London blamed it on the "right-wing" politics of the Indian government.
India is held together by three things: Kashmir, the nuclear tests and
cricket, the commentator wrote in the Sunday Telegraph . Indian Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had delivered victories on the first two. Now
for cricket, the commentator said.
But the ICC is more worried about the greater political divide that can
challenge its dominance. A letter from secretary of Board of Control for
Cricket in India Niranjan Shah to ICC chief Malcolm Gray held out the stark
warning that the three white Test-playing nations, England, Australia and
New Zealand, may find themselves up against the rest. There are ten Test-playing nations.
Former England captain Mike Atherton brought that hidden debate into the
open by warning the ICC on Sunday of the racial divide in the world of cricket.
"The ICC are already deeply divided along racial lines; Pakistan, India, Sri
Lanka, Bangladesh and Zimbabwe form a powerful and united clique within the
whole," Atherton said in a Sunday newspaper.
"(Indian cricket board president Jagmohan) Dalmiya claims to have the
backing of the West Indies, which would leave England, New Zealand and
Australia out on a limb."
Dalmiya could be playing for a result when the member countries of the ICC
meet in Colombo in March. The ICC could be looking at a 7-3 divide in favour
of Dalmiya. The Australian-English team at Lord's at present is being seen
as "the old, white colonial order imposing its wishes", Atherton warned.
In his letter to the ICC, Shah spoke of support from the West Indies,
mentioned commitment of support from Pakistan and added, "Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh always support us." India can also expect support from the
Zimbabwe and South Africa cricket boards, he said.
India is being seen as a country whose money fortunes are bigger than its
fortunes in cricket. India has won only one Test series abroad since 1986
but it is the biggest money spinner for world cricket through advertising,
sponsorship and television rights.
Indian sponsorship is vital particularly to the World Cup due to be played
next in South Africa in 2003. "You can't have a World Cup without Tendulkar
and without Indian fans and sponsors," Manab Majumdar, BBC cricket
commentator, told IANS . "Just a threat from India to withdraw can shake them
up."
The ICC was put on a financially sound footing largely as a result of
Dalmiya's efforts when he was chairman of ICC. Dalmiya's success in taking
over the ICC was itself a first, and followed extensive and successful
lobbying with the non-white cricketing nations. Dalmiya is seen now as
moving further to build what a commentator called "a new world order".
Indo-Asian News Service
The Mike Denness controversy
India's tour of South Africa : Complete coverage
Mail Cricket Editor