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Grim legal tussle expected at Board meeting

A grim legal tussle between three of the most powerful cricket boards and three of their unexpectedly stubborn adversaries is set play itself out when the ICC’s Board of directors meets in Singapore on Saturday

Sharda Ugra07-Feb-2014CSA’s view on the principles

Test Match Fund: CSA agrees to the equal distribution of money to all Full Members barring the BCCI, ECB and CA which would encourage and help in developing Test cricket in these countries. However, it would want to “understand the mechanics” of the fund before this resolution is adopted

Bilateral FTPs: CSA is against the mutually agreed bilateral FTPs proposal. It would like to continue with the existing FTP, which they say is binding (BCCI disagrees), and would like that to be “supplemented” by the bilateral FTP as is being practised by the Full Members at the moment.

Leadership of ICC: “Leadership in any organisation is essential and we support a democratic process whereby the BCCI accepts a leading and effective role in the leadership of the ICC,” is how the CSA would like the ICC to be led, and not in the manner suggested in the resolution which would vest most powers in the hands of the “leading” members

Revenue redistribution: CSA wants to understand the “criteria” through which the Big Three arrived at distribution of the funds to the Full Members. This, CSA has pointed out, will firstly make the mechanism “transparent” and also help members “advance” their cause in terms of what they believe is rightful amount they should be paid as contribution. CSA feels that not getting the rightful percentage of funds could “harm” black cricketers and also “discount” the “struggle for freedom” put forward by Nelson Mandela

ExCo and F&CA: The proposal is to form an Executive Committee (ExCo) along with a fresh Finance & Commercial Affairs (F&CA) committee comprising five members including BCCI, ECB and CA representatives. The proposal also states the BCCI representative will head the ICC Board, the CA representative will head the ExCo while the ECB representative will chair the F&CA. Also, these officials will hold their tenure for the “transitional” period of two years during which the complete overhaul of the governance structure would take place as well as the commercial rights for the next cycle (2015-23) would be sold by the ICC. However, the CSA wants to be part of both the ExCo as well as the F&CA since both these committees are powerful. It also wants members on these committees to be increased to six. The CSA does not want these committees to become the de-facto decision-makers at the ICC.

Associate and Affiliate Funding: CSA does not agree with the proposal to distribute a large percentage of the Associate surplus to the “higher performing non-Full Members” because they feel that would not help the game grow at a broader level in these countries. CSA would instead rely on Associate and Affiliate Members for guidance on this particular issue

Tournament host: CSA wants to host a “major” ICC event in the new cycle (2015-2023) in addition to getting the 2027 World Cup

Lorgat investigations: CSA wants the ICC to “expedite” the investigations against Haroon Lorgat and is not willing to “drop” the case. “Needless to say, it is impacting on the efficient functioning of the organisation (and the CEO) and it is also incurring unnecessary costs.”

A grim legal tussle between three of the most powerful cricket boards and three of their unexpectedly stubborn adversaries is set play itself out when the ICC’s Board of directors meets in Singapore on Saturday.Cricket South Africa has sent its “formal response” to the Big Three’s revamp proposals in a nine-page letter to ICC president Alan Isaac. Sri Lanka Cricket has been involved in a terse exchange of correspondence with Iain Higgins, the ICC’s head of legal affairs, over the constitutionality of the proposals and has responded in severe tones to Higgins’ belief that the proposals could be “considered” as they were legally sound. The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), the third board to oppose the proposals, has also sent a letter about its reservations, the details of which are unknown, and has maintained that it will oppose some of the resolutions. Officials of the three boards met in Singapore on Friday afternoon for a series of strategy meetings.The Big Three, however, remain confident that they will be able to win over one of the three boards and therefore have the numbers to push the radical proposals through, giving themselves greater financial revenue and executive control.While bilateral bargains could be a starting point, the BCCI is particularly keen on using the possibility of staging one half of IPL 2014 outside India, with general elections in the country scheduled to take place in April-May. It is believed that the Bangladesh Cricket Board, which had opposed the position paper before the Dubai meeting, will go to Singapore with the two-tier Test structure removed from the proposals and will look to increase its intake from ICC from the projected $68 million. The BCB will also look to settle bilateral series with India (possibly in 2016) and Australia this year, and seek a slot from England. Once its interests are taken care of, the BCB is expected to go with the majority.SLC has always stated that, despite ICC pressures, it cannot act outside the will of its executive committee. That was the plank the board stood on when it asked for a deferral of the position paper, and it has been the major thread in its communications over the last week.The two documents – from CSA to Isaac and SLC to Higgins – available with ESPNcricinfo, offer starting points of the strategy that could be adopted by the two boards in Saturday’s meeting.In its letter, CSA has offered a detailed response to the “key principles” in the revamped proposals, made alternatives recommendations and expressed its willingness to “proceed with the revamp despite obvious procedural flaws”. SLC is expected to base its opposition on the interpretation of the ICC constitution, having already raised questions over the legality of the proposals. The Sri Lankan board is also likely to question the impartiality of Higgins following communications with the latter over the last few days on the legal standing of the proposals.CSA’s letter was measured and detailed, with references to its history in the ICC and to former South Africa president Nelson Mandela, along with repeated use of the word “democratic”. The South African board has accepted a few broad principles announced by the ICC and rejected outright “the complete de-regulation of the current FTP structure.” The letter has stated that CSA does not support the new bilateral FTP because it “would not be in the best interest of international cricket and therefore ICC members.” It has asked for “basic principles regulating/governing bilateral arrangements and agreements” and wants the ICC to provide that “necessary co-ordination” while working the FTP around ICC sponsorship cycles.The central element of the redrafted resolutions is based on a graded revenue-distribution model that CSA has said it cannot agree to without a “full and detailed understanding of the criteria/inputs and mechanism that would drive funding allocations.” This needed to be made transparent to all members “to understand and be able to advance their position.”CSA has also asked for the number of members on the new Executive Committee (ExCo) to be increased from the proposed five to six and said it “deserves status” on the Big Three’s most influential committees – ExCo and Finance & Commercial Affairs – during what the ICC referred to as a “transitional” period. This transition, CSA has said, should be stipulated at 12 months rather than two years “as that would be sufficient to ensure the successful sale of ICC media rights.” It did not support a proposal that had the chairman of the ICC Board remain as chair of a member board, because it was “not in the best interest of the global ICC family as it will lead to real perceptions of conflict of interest.”SLC’s response to Higgins’ letter, stating that everything around the proposals was legally sound, was far more direct. It questioned a lack of Board-meeting protocol at various stages of the position paper going through the ICC. A reference in Higgins’ letter for the need to “clarify specific areas after the Board had considered them” was taken by the SLC to imply “that you also are intrinsically involved” in the very process the board was objecting to and “consequently would not be in a position to view the matter impartially.”SLC’s letter said that it was “quite telling” that Higgins had “continued to defend these purported Resolutions” despite having “conceded certain points raised by us”. The Sri Lankan board asked how an email from Higgins to the Board of directors on January 28 made a reference to “the principles that were unanimously supported in respect of the ICC’s future structure”. The SLC letter said: “There had been absolutely no unanimity in the support of these proposals, a fact which is amply evident from what transpired at the meetings”.Little has, however, changed in the BCCI-CA-ECB triumvirate’s belief that they would be able to work the numbers in their favour if and when the proposals are brought to vote.The only major difference since the end of the last ICC Board meeting in Dubai is that the matter is not yet resolved despite the ICC’s press release stating that “key principles” of the proposals had the “unanimous support” of members.When the Dubai meeting ended, those in the Big Three camp were quick to point out, that they would get the eighth nation on board by the week’s end, and another meeting would not be required. In the interim, however, the PCB first stated its opposition to the proposals following a meeting of its governing board. Then SLC confirmed its objections after a stakeholders meeting and, on Thursday, questioned the legality of the proposals itself. News of CSA’s draft of a list of its objections became known earlier in the week and has been followed up by the letter to Isaac which became public on Friday.There is still little clarity over which revamp proposals require two-thirds majority (7 out of 10 members) and which require three-fourths (8 out of 10), due to the fact that the proposals require constitutional amendments. The BCCI-CA-ECB triumvirate may still need to pull out one final, bargaining chip to win over one of the ‘Small Three’.