Boycott Pakistan clash in ICC World Cup 2019: Voices in BCCI

NEW DELHI, Feb 20: India should not play Pakistan in the upcoming World Cup in the aftermath of the Pulwama terrorist attack, according to two former BCCI officials who still have a considerable say in policy matters of the board.
“How can you expect India to play Pakistan at the time we have lost so many of our brothers in these cowardly terrorist attack. I am of the firm view that India should not play Pakistan in the coming World Cup,” former BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel told The Indian Express.
The views of former IPL chairman Rajeev Shukla were also along similar lines. He said sporting ties cannot prosper in the present environment.
“I’ve always said that sport is above politics but now it will hamper sporting ties too, not until Pakistan-sponsored terrorism is stopped,” Shukla said.
Patel said the decision-makers in the board should take into account the prevalent mood in the country. He added that the clout India has in world cricket allowed BCCI and the Committee of Administrators to take any step they deemed fit.
“If we play World Cup, then it’s clear that game is bigger than the country’s image. For me, India is first and it’s not only me who has such a sentiment. Ask any Indian now, and they will be of the same view. Cricket will only take place if terrorism is stopped. I hope the current COA and BCCI takes note of it. There is always a limit to everything and this time all limits have been crossed,” he added.
Patel referred to the recent decisions taken by Cricket Club of India, Punjab Cricket Association, IMG-Reliance and Dsport prove that the prevailing sentiment in the country that people don’t want any relationship with Pakistan.
The former board secretary, who deposed in front of International Cricket Council’s (ICC) dispute resolution committee in the BCCI-PCB case over compensation for not playing bilateral series as per an agreement, said he had taken a hard line on the matter.
With tension between the countries escalating, the possibility of India forfeiting their World Cup round-robin match against Pakistan, on June 16 at Old Trafford, remains high. Such an event will affect the two teams, the broadcasters, advertising revenue and not least, the audience. Forfeiting a match, according to the tournament guidelines, account to a defeat, unless it’s a mutual agreement, wherein both teams will share the points. There have been instances in the past when teams have refused to play/visit a country for safety and political reasons. In the 1996 World Cup, Australia and West refused to play in Sri Lanka citing safety issues due to the Sri Lankan civil war. Sri Lanka were awarded full points. In 2003, England refused to travel to Zimbabwe, then under Robert Mugabe’s reign. New Zealand didn’t travel to Kenya, where a terrorist outfit had issued bomb threats. Both teams conceded points to their opponents. But if the India-Pakistan match is forfeited, it would be the first such instance on a neutral venue. While the teams would lose points, the broadcasters and the host associations will miss out on substantial advertising and gate revenue, for the fixture is one of the most-watched cricketing match-ups in the world. In 2017, when the two teams met in the Champions Trophy group stage, then broadcasters Star India claimed they lost nearly Rs 10 crore after the match was truncated to a 48-over-a-side match. (PTI)

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