Follow us

Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman in 'tractable conflict' for their dual roles, concludes BCCI Ombudsman

no image
no image

BCCI Ombudsman has come to the conclusion that Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman are in potential conflicts and that’s why both the individuals stand 'conflicted'. However, they have also added that the conflict is 'tractable' which means they can continue with their respective franchises.

After Sourav Ganguly was served a notice by the BCCI Ombudsman following accusations of “conflict of interest” by three Bengal-based cricket fans, following him taking up the Delhi Capitals’ mentor role while simultaneously being the Cricket Association of Bengal president, it was then the turn of Mumbai Indians and Sunrisers Hyderabad mentors – Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman.

The accuser, this time, was a Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association (MPCA) member Sanjeev Gupta, who had stated that the duo was members of the Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC), which appointed Ravi Shastri as the head coach of the national team in 2017. It had led to Jain serving a notice to Tendulkar and Laxman asking to file a written response before April 28 failing which the former cricketers wouldn't get a chance to explain themselves. 

After receiving replies from both cricketers, the Ombudsman’s office has come to the conclusion that both the individuals stand 'conflicted', but the conflict is "tractable". 

As per BCCI’s Constitution, "Tractable conflict" means both Tendulkar and Laxman can continue to keep their positions with Mumbai Indians and Sunrisers Hyderabad respectively, while being part of the CAC, but that is subject to the fact that the duo will have to recuse themselves should any former or current representative/employee of the franchise apply for an India/BCCI job.

Cricket FootBall Kabaddi

Basketball Hockey

SportsCafe

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previous‌IND-W vs IRE-W | Rodrigues and top three outsmart Ireland as India clinch series on batting haven
India Women beat Ireland Women by 116 runs in the second ODI of the three-match series. Fifties from the top three and a hundred from Jemimah Rodrigues set up a 370-run score for India which Ireland failed to surmount, courtesy of disciplined bowling highlighted by Deepti Sharma’s three-fer.
ICC Rankings | India second-placed behind England as ICC declares end season ODI rankingsread next
England have finished the season as the top-ranked ODI side while India have been placed at the second position with a two-point difference. England will have to win four of the six games that they are set to play against Ireland (one-off ODI) and Pakistan (five-match series) to be at the top.
View non-AMP page