BCCI Waives Off USD 42 Million Penalty On WICB, Confirms Shashank Manohar
Board of Control for Cricket in India president Shashank Manohar has announced the waiver of the financial penalty imposed on the West Indies Cricket Board after they abandoned their tour of India mid-way in 2014.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: April 22, 2016 11:37 am IST
Highlights
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BCCI have waived off a penalty of USD 41.92 million imposed on WICB.
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India to tour West Indies for a four-Test series in July 2016
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West Indies will come to India in 2017 to finish curtailed 2014 series.
Board of Control For Cricket in India president Shashank Manohar stated that the board has decided to waive off the financial penalty of USD 41.97 million that was imposed on the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) for pulling out midway during their 2014 series against India.
Manohar has also said that the remaining part of that series will be played in 2017.
The bilateral relations between the two boards had turned frosty when West Indies abandoned their tour of India mid-way. However, the ice was broken once WICB announced that India will be touring Caribbean for a four-Test series, this summer.
"That is now sorted out because they are going to come back and play here next year. They have to complete those [unfinished] games. That was a claim raised by the board. [We] would be satisfied by them coming and playing here," Manohar told ESPNcricinfo.
Manohar also said that the schedule will be finalised by the end of May. He said no other conditions were laid out by the BCCI during the talks with the West Indies board. WICB president Dave Cameron, without elaborating much, said: "We stand by what ever Mr Manohar says."
In October 2014, when West Indies captain Dwayne Bravo led the players' boycott, the team returned home after the fourth ODI against India in Dharamsala.