‘Big 3’ to control cricket, Srini to head ICC

Update: 2014-02-08 23:41 GMT
The International Cricket Council (ICC) board passed key structural and financial reforms on Saturday, effectively placing India, England and Australia in charge of the game.

Indian cricket board president N Srinivasan will consequentially chair the ICC board from July while Cricket Australia chief Wally Edwards will head a newly-formed executive committee.

Pakistan and Sri Lanka abstained from voting, citing need for more time to discuss the proposals, while other eight full members backed the reforms, the ICC said in a statement after the meeting in Singapore.

‘The Board has made some significant decisions today which provide us with long-term certainty in relation to the future governance, competition and financial models of the ICC,’ the governing body’s president Alan Isaac said.

The proposals had invited widespread criticism with some suggesting that the ‘Big Three’, who will get a major share of the revenue, will take over the sport at the expense of the other cricketing nations.
The England and Wales Cricket Board ( ECB) chairman Giles Clarke will continue to head the finance and commercial affairs committee in the new structure.

‘These roles will be for an initial two-year transitional period to 2016 only,’ the ICC said.The existing Future Tours Programme paved way for ‘contractually binding’ bilateral agreements between countries to play test matches until 2023.

The financial restructuring will see India, cricket’s biggest fund generator, as well as England and Australia pocketing greater share of the ICC revenue.

‘Full members will gain greater financial recognition based on the contribution they have made to the game, particularly in terms of finance, their ICC history and their on-field performances in the three formats,’ the governing body said.

The ICC said a test cricket fund would be introduced to help its members sustain the health of the five-day format.

‘The structure of the model will ensure that none of the full members will be worse off than they are at present and - if forecasts of revenue generation prove to be correct - all will be significantly better off,’ the ICC added.

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