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ICC conclave leaves BCCI red-faced

Kolkata: The Indian cricket board had egg on its face when the International Cricket Council (ICC) decided during its quarterly meet here to convert the Champions Trophy — conceived by the country's late administrator of the game, Jagmohan Dalmiya in 1998 when he helmed the global body — into a WorldT20.
The loss of face is more as India is slated to host the 2021 event — the cut off date for the change in format ordained by the ICC — and the country's cricket mandarins had been crying from rooftops that they would resist any alternation of the 50-over variant.
At the end of the five-day conclave on Thursday, ICC Chief Executive Dave Richardson said the global body has "unanimously agreed" that the 2021 meet would now be a 16-team event in the shortest format, effectively scrapping the eight-team Champions Trophy.
Richardson virtually rubbed more salt into the wound when he disclosed during the customary post meeting media conference that, a "BCCI representative" who attended the meeting where the decision was taken, voted in favour of the motion and it was passed unanimously.
"So I don't think that's an issue," Richardson said.
Days earlier, a top official of the Board of Control for Cricket (BCCI) had told IANS on the sidelines of the ICC meet that the Champions Trophy is "synonymous" with 50-over cricket, like Test cricket is always played over five days.
"The sun rises in the east. Similarly, Test cricket is played over five days and the Champions Trophy is a 50-over format tournament," the official had said in an informal chat.
There are also reports that the BCCI fears a loss of about $30 million if Champions Trophy 2021 is replaced by a WorldT20.
BCCI acting secretary Amitabh Chaudhury was quoted as saying after Richardson's press conference that "India will never support the decision".
In the press conference on Thursday, Richardson made it clear in as many words that the ICC is now looking to broad-base the game with the help of T20 cricket's popularity.
The ICC chief executive even asserted there will be no five-day format in women's cricket, as "barring Australia and England, no other country's eves wanted to play in white flannels". Instead, there would be a clutch of T20 International matches, which most teams want to be engaged in.
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