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When
Indian media mogul Subhash Chandra announced plans of launching
the breakaway Indian Cricket League (ICL), cricket officials on
this side of the border had no idea that the announcement would
snowball into yet another headache for them.
In
July this year, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chief Nasim Ashraf
rejected the ICL as a non-starter and announced that any of his
players joining the League would never play for Pakistan again.
Perhaps he thought that many of his 'well-paid' top stars would
be tempted by lucrative offers made by the League's chief recruiting
officer Kapil Dev, a former Indian captain.
Perhaps
he was unaware of the sort of money the ICL was throwing around.
Unconfirmed reports suggest that Pakistani players have been offered
up to Rs. 120 million for three seasons (roughly a total of three
months of cricket spread over a three-year period).
Just
weeks after Ashraf's warning, the ICL organisers announced that
they had roped in four Pakistani Test cricketers including their
top performer in recent years, Mohammad Yousuf, and former captain
Inzamam-ul-Haq. Experienced all-rounder, Abdul Razzaq, and discarded
Test opener, Imran Farhat, were the other two players opting to
sign up with the ICL for contracts worth millions of rupees. The
PCB officials are so incensed at their players' dalliance with the
rebel competition that their future with the Pakistan team is in
real danger.
Several
other Pakistani stars, including pace star Shoaib Akhtar and Shahid
Afridi, however, claim to have rejected the offer and decided to
stay available for national duty.
Elsewhere
in the world, the ICL got a lukewarm response from top professional
cricketers as none of the current stars opted to join it. That leaves
Yousuf as the League's biggest catch to date, if you count the likes
of former West Indian captain Brian Lara among the has-beens.
Since the day Chandra, the ambitious Essel Group head, unveiled
his ICL plans, the venture has raised the million-dollar question:
is this the beginning of a Kerry Packer World Series Cricket (WSC)-style
breakaway body?
Chandra
has been insisting all along that he will never pull a Kerry Packer,
but leading cricket administrators like the International Cricket
Council (ICC), the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)
and the PCB are deeply suspicious of his plans - and not without
reason. The ICL may well become another WSC if Chandra's gambit
works.
The
officialdom of world cricket is insecure - and is not even hiding
it. The ICC has refused to recognise the League, while the cricket
boards of India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka have threatened to ban any
player joining the ICL. Even the New Zealand cricket board has announced
that it will not release any of its contracted players to play in
the ICL, signalling a hardline stand on the rebel League.
But
Chandra and company are not intimidated and are willing to go ahead
with the Rs. 100-crore venture which some critics have rejected
as mere 'Mickey-Mouse cricket.'
The
ICL has drawn comparisons with the WSC that was organised by Aussie
media mogul Kerry Packer for his television network, Channel Nine,
in the late 1970s and had a worldwide impact on the game.
However,
most critics believe the ICL is no match to the WSC, which turned
the cricket world upside down in the late 1970s.
Almost
three decades later, Chandra has come out with a similar idea. His
ICL was launched in May and plans are to stage its inaugural tournament
in October-November with a mix of foreign and domestic cricketers.
So far the ICL has signed up over 50 players, both from India and
elsewhere, including the aforementioned Yousuf, Inzamam and Lara,
and Indian batsman Dinesh Mongia.
Cynics
believe there is a fundamental flaw with the ICL concept. They argue
that cricket is a sport with dominant affiliations for national
teams, not club teams. The key driver of cricket's popularity is
international tournaments essentially ensuring the best cricketers
in the world spend most of the year playing cricket for their countries.
They
point out that the city teams that ICL will create go against this
fundamental premise and this could be the defining reason why ICL
may not be successful.
However,
critics welcoming the ICL believe that it is a phenomenon waiting
to happen. They point out that the ICL is rapidly gaining support
and acceptance from within the cricketing fraternity.
They
label the BCCI bosses as control-freaks and say that the Board is
all about power, politics and cartels. They claim that the ICL is
the 'inevitable response' to this vicious cycle.
Embroiled
in controversy, ICL organisers are busy overcoming some teething
problems ahead of the opening season, just weeks away. The ICL has
started the coaching of its players at a privately owned stadium
in the South Indian city of Chennai. The stadium which is about
15 kilometres from Chennai and en route to Pondicherry, is spread
over 18 acres and houses an entertainment complex, besides three
turf wickets.
In
Pakistan, meanwhile, PCB officials are making efforts to dissuade
Yousuf, their batting mainstay, from joining the League and are
even considering the option of offering him 'compensation' if he
stays committed to national duty.
"The
ICL offer is nothing when compared to what Pakistan has in store
for Yousuf," says PCB chief Nasim Ashraf. Whether Yousuf, snubbed
by national selectors while picking Pakistan's 15-man squad for
the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa, is willing to listen is
another question.
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