Indian Fans Target Grag Chapel

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Sep 20, 2003
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Indian fans are calling for GRAG CHAPEL'S (SIC), head. Apparently they can't accept his influence in getting Ganguly sacked. They are burning effigies of him in the streets. It's the burning (pardon the pun), issue in Indian cricket atm.


Ganguly dropped from third Test

As outrage grows, moves are on to 'rehabilitate' Ganguly


December 16, 2005



Street protests over Sourav Ganguly's ouster are being echoed in Parliament © Getty Images


Less than twenty four hours after the national selectors decided to wield the axe on Sourav Ganguly, the Indian board is desperately pursuing damage control. What has triggered the panic button is not the extent or intensity of mass protests, which were predictable, but outrage expressed across India's diverse political spectrum.

Sharad Pawar, the BCCI president, who categorically claimed that he was not party to the decision, told the Times of India, "As a cricket lover, I am hurt and shocked over the exclusion of Ganguly. In the Delhi Test his performance was satisfactory. Also, he was a victorious captain and we feel proud of him".

Already, moves are apparently on behind the scenes to review the issue and to, if possible, provide Ganguly with a more dignified exit. Pawar has let it be known that it is "my prerogative" to sit with the selectors in the next "two or three days" to "understand" what actually happened. The scheduled selection committee meeting on December 22 and 23 thus assumes considerable significance.

Principal among the various `rehabilitation' measures being discussed is the one whereby Ganguly will be included for the upcoming tour of Pakistan as one final appearance for the national side. This is to enable him a "Steve Waugh-like exit" and even if he were to score two consecutive hundreds there it would make no difference.

After the defeat of the Jagmohan Dalmiya camp - believed to have solidly stood behind Ganguly on all occasions - in the recent board elections the latest selectorial decision is being widely seen as vindictive on the part of the new incumbents. "Extraneous factors are deciding all these things, and a dirty game is on," said Mohammad Salim, the Marxist member of parliament, whose party is an ally of the central government, in which Pawar is a prominent minister. Gurudas Dasgupta, the Communist Party of India MP, said, "throwing out Sourav is the worst kind of politics". He has also shot off a letter to the board president on the issue.

The opposition Bharatiya Janata Party's Arun Jaitley, the Samajwadi Party's Amar Singh and the Rashtriya Janata Dal's Laloo Prasad Yadav too complained in parliament about the "unfair" treatment meted out to Ganguly. Somnath Chatterjee, the parliament speaker, has reportedly spoken to Praful Patel, a Pawar confidante and central government minister, on the issue and the need to make amends for Ganguly.

Prominent people from other walks of life have also joined the chorus against Ganguly's ouster. Soumitra Chatterjee, legendary hero of many a Satyajit Ray film, claimed that, "It's an act of treachery to cricket that has polluted the sport's atmosphere".

Ganguly had scored 40 and 39 in the second Test against Sri Lanka at Delhi. After the match the selection committee met and announced the squad for the final Test at Ahmedabad. The selectors explained Ganguly's exclusion on the grounds of retaining the in-form Yuvraj Singh in the playing XI as part of the team's nurturing of younger talents and its build up to the 2007 World Cup. But, according to critics, this position contradicted the selectors' earlier promise not to tamper with winning combinations.

The selectors, on their part, have said that the decision was "not motivated or made in a hurry". Kiran More, the chairman of selectors, also said that "our decision is final. We will not change it".

© Cricinfo
 
Ganguly issue to be discussed in Parliament

Cricinfo staff

December 17, 2005



Sourav Ganguly: what fate awaits? © Getty Images




The axing of Sourav Ganguly has triggered off a national debate that will take on political dimensions when it is discussed in Parliament next week. Somnath Chatterjee, the speaker of the Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament, announced this while adding that "a great injustice has been done to Ganguly because of politics in the game".

Ganguly had already received backing from political quarters, with Pranab Mukherjee, the defence minister, and Buddhadeb Bhattacharya, chief minister of West Bengal, among the many big guns who attributed Ganguly's exclusion to political manoeuvers.

While announcing the plan to discuss the issue, Chatterjee also added that such incidents will affect the morale of the players. It is also unclear under what rule the discussion will take place, with the Parliment usually not questioning the affairs of private bodies like the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), unless they are considered matters of public importance.

Sharad Pawar, the president of the BCCI, made it clear that he would not ask the selectors to revise their decision but added that he would meet them and dicuss the logic behind the move. On the issue being discussed in Parliament, he said, "It's quite unfortunate when people who always say there should be no politics in the game themselves indulge in these tactics."
 
It was an odd appointment. Firstly Greg Chappel was never fond of the climate on the sub continent and pulled out of at least one tour to Pakistaan for health reasons. Secondly his South Australian stint as a coach was hardly a recommendation for a promotion.

Evidently Ganguly approached him for advice before India's last tour of Australia and the two struck a personal friendship. Always suspected that had something to do with his appointment. Now that the disagreements have started it's become a national mess for India with Chappel front and centre.

Greg Chappel isn't a young man now and wouldn't really be looking for having his effigy burnt as a life style choice. Going to affect the rest of his days. (He has only just got over the underarm incident.)
 

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