Cricketers to be Governed by BCCI Conflict of Interest Rule
According to the new rule, players would have to declare the player management firm or person representing them to the BCCI. They cannot sign an endorsement deal with a sponsor which is a competitor to the Board's sponsor, including apparel
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: November 09, 2015 12:09 pm IST
With the BCCI planning to bring strict conflict of interest rules for even current cricketers, they would not be allowed to have business interest in the player management companies which represent them. (Important Decisions to be Taken in BCCI AGM)
The proposed conflict of interest clause will be tabled at the 86th AGM of the BCCI here on Monday.
The players also have to declare the player management firm or person representing them to the Board and cannot sign an endorsement deal with a sponsor which is a competitor to the BCCI sponsor, including apparel.
It has also been proposed that the current lot of players should not be on board in a controlling position of a commercial organisation that has signed a contract with the Board or its affiliates.
Retired cricketers on BCCI's payroll or contracted to the Board should not be part of the Board's various committees, including the IPL Governing Council, as per another proposal on the same issue.
As per the clause, national coaches and selectors should not be associated with any private coaching academies or with player management company or player agent, even in honorary capacity, or pen newspaper columns or be contracted with print or electronic media during their tenure.
Selectors should also not be a member of any managing committee of the BCCI's affiliates. Strict conflict of interest clause has also been proposed for administrators, in both BCCI and its affiliates. BCCI president Shashank Manohar will put on his practising lawyer's cap and try to push through all these reforms at its AGM that will affect quite a few past cricketers wearing multiple hats even as they are part of its affiliated units.
The AGM is also set to elect new senior, junior and women's selection panels and the proposed stricter adherence to conflict of interest clause could lead to the removal of South Zone representative in the Sandeep Patil-led seniors panel - Roger Binny - as his son Stuart is an active player.