PCB, BCCI brace for ‘landmark’ dispute panel judgment
DUBAI: The International Cricket Council (ICC) panel hearing a dispute between the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) could potentially deliver a “landmark” judgment with reverberations for all intersections between sports and politics.
A three-person dispute panel, set up to arbitrate the PCB’s claims for monetary compensation for two bilateral tours the BCCI didn’t honour, finished proceedings here on Wednesday.There is no indication when the panel, headed by Michael Beloff QC and including legal heavyweights Jan Paulsson and Dr Annabelle Bennett, will return a verdict though it is not unusual in such cases for it to take anywhere between four and six weeks.
Lawyers from both sides presented their cases over three days that began in what was described as a “tense” and “formal” atmosphere and which remained “intense” throughout. A couple of officials likened it to the tension of an India-Pakistan limited-overs encounter.
The dispute centers around an agreement the two boards signed in 2014 to play six series over eight years between 2015 and 2023. That agreement was the price the BCCI paid for the PCB’s approval of the Big Three governance changes; those changes were first voted in before being reversed.
The PCB is claiming compensation of US$ 63 million for two series it was supposed to host in November 2014 and December 2015 as per the agreement, but which eventually did not take place.
The primary reason for BCCI’s refusal to tour is political, with relations strained between the two countries.The BCCI argued that the agreement was a letter of intent that would only become a binding agreement once government permission had been granted. The PCB’s counter was that under English law it suffices as an agreement.
Salman Khurshid — India’s foreign minister at the time the agreement was signed — was one of five witnesses the BCCI called up. Among the others were Sanjay Patel, the board secretary and signatory to the agreement, Sundar Raman, a key figure in the ICC revamp, and Ratnakar Shetty, the BCCI administrative head who was a conduit between the board and government.
Also appearing was Shashank Manohar, the ICC chairman who was BCCI president in 2015 when one of the series was scheduled. His appearance as a BCCI witness while ICC chairman raised eyebrows - the PCB was unhappy with his role as a mediator in one of the good-faith meetings the boards had before this panel was set up.
Conspicuous by their absence, however, were N Srinivasan, the BCCI president at the time of the agreement, and the then secretary Anurag Thakur. None of the witnesses were current BCCI officials.
The PCB, in contrast, called upon just Najam Sethi, their board chairman at the time, and Subhan Ahmed, the chief operating officer. To PCB eyes that witness count is illustrative of the two approaches to the case: the PCB simplifying and focusing on what it believes matters most — the agreement letter — and the BCCI going beyond that and into the circumstances in which it was created and under which it could operate.
Only two outcomes are now possible — that the PCB wins its claim or it doesn’t. The panel cannot force the lost series to be rescheduled. But as much as the money, both boards — and the ICC — will be relieved to receive some long overdue clarity on cricket’s most compelling but presently moribund rivalry.
Pakistan and India are not going to meet in Test cricket’s new showpiece event, the two-year Test Championship starting next year. They are not scheduled to meet in the following two-year cycle either, or in the concurrent ODI league. That confines the rivalry to ICC limited-overs events and other multilateral tournaments such as the Asia Cup for the foreseeable future.
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