Shashank Manohar elected as new BCCI president, ends Srinivasan era
The veteran cricket administrator was the lone nominee at the end of deadline
New Delhi: Shashank Manohar has been elected, unopposed, as the new BCCI president on Sunday, following the death of Jagmohan Dalmiya in September.
A special general meeting of BCCI was scheduled in Mumbai on Sunday, where Manohar took over the as the new chief.
The post had been left vacant after the death of Dalmiya – the West Bengal heavyweight.
According to reports, all the six units of East Zone unanimously proposed Manohar's candidature for the president's post. A BCCI by-election needs only one proposer from the zone which is electing the president and Manohar got the nod from all the six associations.
Manohar was the lone nominee at the end of Saturday’s 7 pm deadline.
Manohar, who took over as the 36th president of the BCCI, is known for his integrity and regains control of the country's richest sporting body at a time when cricket's image has been tarnished by the spot-fixing scandal and intense factionalism.
The reticent 58-year-old Nagpur-based lawyer in the past decade, has been known as someone, who bears a tough, no- nonsense attitude and at the same time is accommodating towards the needs of the players.
A shrewd tactician and someone who knows implications of any policy decision like the back of his hand, Manohar has been a trouble-shooter since 2005, when he became the vice-president and 'Man-Friday' to Sharad Pawar, who became the president that year.
Once he was through in 2011 with his first presidential tenure, Manohar stepped away from the limelight, rarely voicing his opinion on cricketing matters until the spot- fixing scandal broke in 2013.
From then, Manohar and N Srinivasan became adversaries with the former sticking to the principles that need to be followed urging the Tamil Nadu strongman to relinquish his post. Srinivasan, on his part, kept claiming that it was a case of pure vendetta.
That he stuck to his principals was proved when he made it clear that he is not in favour of Pawar aligning with Srinivasan in the presidential battle following the demise of Dalmiya.
In a Cricket Board riddled by scandals, factionalism, money-power and heavy politicking, the need of the hour was a man, whose image could restore the faith and credibility of the sporting body whose revenues runs into millions of dollars.
While mulling on a replacement for Dalmiya, the majority of the influential decision-makers in the BCCI including Finance Minister Arun Jaitley could come up with only one name that could be befitting to the stature of a body like the BCCI and that was Manohar.
Some of his ground-breaking decisions during his first tenure (2008-11) include suspension of erstwhile IPL commissioner Lalit Modi on allegations of financial irregularities, calling for fresh bids for new teams after allegations of rigging, and advising BCCI to encash the bank guarantee of Kochi Tuskers Kerala after they defaulted on franchisee fee.