The Japan Times - New BCCI chief Thakur under pressure to reform

EUR -
AED 3.781118
AFN 78.745827
ALL 99.581901
AMD 408.67183
ANG 1.854467
AOA 469.418298
ARS 1084.361268
AUD 1.664716
AWG 1.854254
AZN 1.76883
BAM 1.962915
BBD 2.07753
BDT 125.484819
BGN 1.956934
BHD 0.388078
BIF 3009.527339
BMD 1.029426
BND 1.406553
BOB 7.126071
BRL 5.979732
BSD 1.028954
BTN 89.654435
BWP 14.46256
BYN 3.367504
BYR 20176.752469
BZD 2.066972
CAD 1.500162
CDF 2933.864927
CHF 0.939264
CLF 0.036772
CLP 1014.653789
CNY 7.409501
CNH 7.532568
COP 4284.728978
CRC 524.222957
CUC 1.029426
CUP 27.279793
CVE 110.766544
CZK 25.215379
DJF 182.949408
DKK 7.461312
DOP 63.670212
DZD 139.760083
EGP 51.844164
ERN 15.441392
ETB 131.625891
FJD 2.398909
FKP 0.847822
GBP 0.830191
GEL 2.944669
GGP 0.847822
GHS 15.801405
GIP 0.847822
GMD 74.634223
GNF 8909.683355
GTQ 7.961858
GYD 215.272344
HKD 8.021752
HNL 26.212005
HRK 7.5967
HTG 134.591093
HUF 408.386224
IDR 16860.970852
ILS 3.681383
IMP 0.847822
INR 89.535673
IQD 1347.918253
IRR 43338.840869
ISK 146.199008
JEP 0.847822
JMD 162.177812
JOD 0.730276
JPY 159.288254
KES 132.79566
KGS 90.023512
KHR 4138.293064
KMF 492.940837
KPW 926.483646
KRW 1502.900671
KWD 0.317794
KYD 0.857537
KZT 537.774832
LAK 22377.665102
LBP 92236.582709
LKR 308.240208
LRD 202.796697
LSL 19.458025
LTL 3.039628
LVL 0.62269
LYD 5.052312
MAD 10.386747
MDL 19.27853
MGA 4912.998022
MKD 61.531482
MMK 3343.535968
MNT 3497.990156
MOP 8.26032
MRU 41.106992
MUR 48.688026
MVR 15.863624
MWK 1784.362742
MXN 21.026018
MYR 4.606661
MZN 65.790635
NAD 19.458025
NGN 1531.322781
NIO 37.86725
NOK 11.7303
NPR 143.447498
NZD 1.840346
OMR 0.396317
PAB 1.028969
PEN 3.844393
PGK 4.128965
PHP 60.193581
PKR 287.08531
PLN 4.233365
PYG 8113.406975
QAR 3.751999
RON 4.976344
RSD 117.116873
RUB 102.685308
RWF 1454.45754
SAR 3.860967
SBD 8.702449
SCR 14.755156
SDG 618.685129
SEK 11.45601
SGD 1.401764
SHP 0.847822
SLE 23.548112
SLL 21586.551495
SOS 588.082916
SRD 36.137989
STD 21307.042827
SVC 9.003721
SYP 13384.59874
SZL 19.451691
THB 34.913003
TJS 11.215542
TMT 3.613286
TND 3.321539
TOP 2.411021
TRY 37.018681
TTD 6.97649
TWD 33.985266
TZS 2645.682857
UAH 43.034177
UGX 3784.717677
USD 1.029426
UYU 44.601658
UZS 13361.428385
VES 60.188974
VND 26044.481504
VUV 122.215539
WST 2.883244
XAF 658.349578
XAG 0.032683
XAU 0.000365
XCD 2.782075
XDR 0.789183
XOF 658.343159
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.941065
ZAR 19.34807
ZMK 9266.067942
ZMW 28.887985
ZWL 331.474799
  • RBGPF

    3.8000

    66

    +5.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    7.35

    -1.9%

  • BCC

    -1.0200

    125.14

    -0.82%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.35

    -0.51%

  • NGG

    0.6100

    62.01

    +0.98%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    69.86

    -1.29%

  • GSK

    -0.3700

    34.9

    -1.06%

  • SCS

    -0.4100

    11.07

    -3.7%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    49.85

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.46

    -0.56%

  • RIO

    -0.5600

    59.85

    -0.94%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.75

    -0.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.49

    -0.59%

  • BTI

    0.1000

    39.74

    +0.25%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    24.03

    +1%

  • BP

    -0.1900

    30.87

    -0.62%

New BCCI chief Thakur under pressure to reform
New BCCI chief Thakur under pressure to reform

New BCCI chief Thakur under pressure to reform

India's new cricket chief Anurag Thakur is a close ally of right-wing Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a media-friendly administrator seen as capable of cleaning up the governing body's tarnished image.

Text size:

Thakur, who heads the youth wing of Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), is now charged with running the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), one of the most powerful bodies in world sport.

The three-time member of parliament on Sunday became the youngest-ever president of the cash-rich but under-fire BCCI, at the age of just 41.

Thakur is comfortable in the limelight and could not be more different from his 58-year-old predecessor Shashank Manohar, who shunned the media and did not even own a mobile phone.

"He is one of the more visible, forthright and efficient administrators in the game," said Boria Majumdar, a veteran sports journalist.

Indian batting great Sunil Gavaskar praised Thakur for being "very, very available to the media" at a time when the BCCI needs someone confident to get its views across to the public.

The president of the BCCI is seen by many as the most powerful post in global cricket. The BCCI benefits from huge TV deals that have in the past allowed it to effectively run the International Cricket Council (ICC) with its allies, Australia and England.

But the Indian board is under immense pressure to implement wide-ranging reforms laid out by the country's highest court after a string of corruption scandals in recent years.

Manohar quit earlier this month under growing pressure from the Supreme Court to carry out retired judge Rajendra Mal Lodha's recommendations for reforming the BCCI.

- Fixing scandal -

Thakur, an MP in Himachal Pradesh state, has walked the corridors of the BCCI since 2000, when he was elected president of his state association, and was most recently secretary.

He has been credited with astute handling of the fallout from the Lodha report, but as president will have to use all of his political acumen to guide the BCCI through the storm.

Lodha's report, drawn up in the wake of the Indian Premier League match-fixing scandal, advocated the introduction of age limits for BCCI office-bearers and a ban on television adverts between overs during live broadcasts.

"The BCCI is not looking for an escape route. We believe in transparency and accountability," Thakur said in February.

"In the last nine months, we have done things which would indicate that we are in the right direction."

However some say Thakur still must convince the government that the BCCI is serious about making genuine changes.

"In this moment of crisis with the Lodha Commission report hanging on their heads the BCCI needed somebody like him to steer them in the right direction," journalist Majumdar told AFP, adding that being from the BJP would help.

The ambitious Thakur took over the Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association aged just 25.

He even played one first class match in 2000-01, making a duck off seven balls, but satisfying the rule that allows only first-class players to be national selectors.

Thakur showed political nous when he stayed clear of siding with any camp during Narayanaswami Srinivasan's controversial tenure as BCCI chief between 2011-2014.

- 'New ideas' -

He quickly became the face of the BCCI as an ill and ageing president Jagmohan Dalmiya -- elected as a consensus candidate after Srinivasan's ousting -- remained titular head until he died in September 2015.

Thakur's big break came last year when he pipped the incumbent to the secretary's post by a single vote.

He became a popular face amongst the cricket-crazy public thanks to regular TV appearances, and during Manohar's six-month stint at the helm revelled in his role as the BCCI's public voice.

Thakur was credited with getting Indian legends Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman and Sourav Ganguly to join a cricket advisory committee that he set up.

"He is young, his ideas are new and he is not shy of taking decisions for the improvement of the game," Nikhil Chopra, a former Indian cricketer, told AFP.

M.Matsumoto--JT