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Lack of MoU unlikely to affect England tour


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Lack of MoU unlikely to affect England tour

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199975.3.jpg The BCCI cannot enter into any contracts without the Lodha committee's approval, which held up the signing of an MoU with the ECB © Cricket Australia

 

England's tour of India is unlikely to be disrupted by the hurdles the BCCI faces in signing a Memorandum of Understanding with the ECB. Officials from both boards confirmed there has been no change to their preparations ahead of the series, which starts in Rajkot on November 9.

The state associations hosting the five Tests - Saurashtra, Punjab, Andhra, Mumbai and Tamil Nadu - also said they did not foresee any difficulty as long as the England team's hotel costs, airfare and the daily allowance are taken care of. A representative from one state association even said they would be happy to foot the hotel bill should it come to that.

Alastair Cook's squad had landed in Mumbai on Wednesday, but doubts emerged over whether the series would take place after email exchanges between the BCCI and the Lodha Committee revealed that an MoU had not been signed yet.

According to an order passed by the Supreme Court of India on October 21, all contracts that the BCCI enters into have to be cleared by the Lodha Committee, which was appointed by the court to suggest changes to the way the board functions. Matters directly related to cricket though are beyond the Committee's remit, which was why they had asked the BCCI for more information before giving their approval for the MoU's signing. On Thursday evening, BCCI secretary Ajay Shirke sent a copy of the blank MoU to the Lodha Committee without mentioning any specifics.

To work around the problem, Shirke wrote to Phil Neale, England's operations manager, on Thursday asking the ECB to pay for its own expenses until further updates. "We are already in India, there is no change to any plans and we are looking forward to the series against India," an ECB spokesperson said.

A top BCCI official said the board already had contracts in place with the hotels that England would be staying at and, as such, lodging expenses shouldn't prove a problem. "The main issue is their daily allowance has to be cleared. Ultimately it is a large amount," the official said. "The daily allowance is in the range of GBP 50-75. The England contingent strength is about 30 including the players and support staff. The BCCI will need to calculate the daily allowance for roughly 50 days for the Test series, and that amount will need to be ratified by the committee before the Indian board disburses the amount to ECB."

The BCCI official also said the MoU could be signed once the series starts. "In letter and spirit, we can't sign it right now because it is part of the list we sent to the Lodha Committee," the official said. "Unless and until they revert we can't sign something that we have referred to them. (But) ultimately we hope it will get signed."

In the interim order delivered on October 21, the Supreme Court asked the BCCI to stop distributing funds to its state associations until they instituted the reforms the Lodha Committee had suggested in January.

But the state associations that will host the five Tests said they have no trouble taking on routine costs in the course of the matches and can provide security and in-ground hospitality for the England team if the BCCI finds a way to take on the tourists' hotel charges and daily allowances.

Niranjan Shah, secretary of Saurashtra Cricket Association, said he saw no threat to Rajkot's first-ever Test in under a week's time. All the preparations, he said, were going on as scheduled, and even added that if SCA has to pay for lodging, it will.

Punjab Cricket Association, that will host the third Test, in Mohali, is also going ahead with its preparations. "Will PCA do the match? Yes, PCA will," the secretary MP Pandove said. "Will PCA pay for the expenses? Yes, PCA will pay for the expenses it is required to pay for. To get the teams here, to pay for their hotels, to pay their daily allowance, that is BCCI's job. All ground hospitality, all local transport, traffic control, all staging costs, that is our responsibility. That has been the understanding for years now."

Tamil Nadu Cricket Association, which will host the final Test of series in Chennai, will finalise its plan at an executive meeting on November 7. "We will meet only those expenses that the states have to pay," a TNCA official said. "Payments concerning daily allowances, airfare, hotel bills have to be met by the BCCI. We will take care of ground expenses and team security."

Mumbai Cricket Association, hosting the fourth Test of the series, has said it is ready to host the match, following its managing committee meeting on Friday. Andhra Cricket Association secretary G Ganga Raju, who is also one of the five BCCI vice-presidents, has said the association has enough funds to host England for the second Test, in Visakhapatnam.

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