
November 29, 2005
Farooq Abdullah's turn in the limelight
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
After Pawar it was the turn of Farooq Abdullah, president of the Jammu and Kashmir Cricket Association to spend five minutes in the glare of the media. "There was a need for change and it has taken place in the best way," he said. "Just like in general elections where Prime Ministers come and go in the most democractic manner. Similarly here the results were declared and both sides have accepted it. Dalmiya has withdrawn all the objections [he had earlier raised]." Abdullah called this move of Dalmiya's "honourable" and praised Dalmiya for the work he had done.
As a parting shot he added,"Hopefully in the future there will be no need for elections to be conducted by someone else [from outside the BCCI]."
Triumphant Pawar hails observer's role
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
While the results of the election had not yet been officially announced, the results were widely accepted, and Sharad Pawar came out of the meeting room to briefly address the media. Pawar thanked TS Krishna Murthy, the observer, for "taking pains" to "clear the way for a smooth election". He added that his aim was to "develop basic infrastructure", and hoped to get "full co-operation" from Ranbir Singh Mahendra, the outgoing president. He also said he wanted to give "support and strength to the younger generation." It was hard to grab more than snatches of Pawar's statement, as cameramen and photographers jockeyed for space, screaming and shouting.
Even the few words that made it out of the melee were only possible after Lalit Modi, president of the Rajasthan Cricket Association, yelled, "If you don't stop screaming we can't even get to first base," mixing sporting metaphors and betraying the time he spent in USA.
Pawar claims victory
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
Amid massive chaos, yelling and screaming, members of the Sharad Pawar group charged out of the room where the elections were happening and proclaimed victory by the thumping margin of 20 to 10. But soon after another member emerged and said the margin was 20-11, with the 11th vote being the the chairman's vote, cast by Ranbir Singh Mahendra. While no official confirmation of the result or the margin was available at the time, there was no denial from the Jagmohan Dalmiya-backed Mahendra group.
While the vote for the president went 20-11, the remaining members of the Pawar group are also learned to have won. This means MP Pandove (Joint Secretary), N Srinivasan (Treasurer) and Niranjan Shah (Secretary) have all won. The margin in the last case is believed to be 18-13.
Even before an official announcement has come from TS Krishna Murthy, the observer, the celebrations have begun in right earnest.
Dalmiya's appearence sparks a feeding frenzy
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
If Sharad Pawar's entry was grand, Jagmohan Dalmiya's began quietly, as he emerged down a corridoor in the hotel. But as he neared the room where the AGM was to take place the noise level went through the roof. Television cameramen and photographers numbering more than 100, packed into a small galley, fell over each other to get a picture. The frenzy reached such a crescendo that the hotel staff were forced to step up and threaten to throw the whole lot out if they could not work without disturbing the peace.
Meanwhile unconfirmed reports are filtering thick and fast that many
representations were made to the court-appointed observer in the wee hours of the morning. The rumour is that rival factions in the three contentious associations - Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar/Jharkhand - would be allowed to vote, in sealed envelopes. Then, on resoltion of which group was deemed the authorised representative, the vote would be counted.
Genuine grievances or depserate delay tactics from a incumbent seeing his grasp on power slipping? Watch this space ...
The bigwigs make an entrance
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
Sirens wailing, a convoy of at least 18 cars of all shapes and sizes
screeched into the portico at the Taj Bengal. Commando forces fanned out, automoatic weapons on the ready, sealing off the door as Sharad Pawar, with Farooq Abdullah, who enjoys Z+ security, by his side. Soon after, just as Pawar stepped into the hotel the media swooped. If you cut a flank of raw beef and threw it into a tank of starving piranhas the feeding frenzy that would ensue would pale in comparison to the television channels' hunger for a quick quote. Questions flew thick and fast, in many languages, but Pawar barely whispered in answer and, before you know it, was escorted away.
About fifteen minutes earlier, the first party had already arrived, in
quieter but no less strident fashion - IS Bindra and Lalit Modi stepped out of a shiny new Mercedes Benz, dressed in sharp suits, showing no signs of being worse for wear after the pre-election party that apparently rocked their hotel on Monday night.
All quiet on the Eastern front
Posted on 11/29/2005 in BCCI elections 2005
The Taj Bengal hotel, the battleground for the presidential elections of the Board of Control for Cricket in India was quiet - the calm before the storm - save for earlybird journalists. Kolkata's top cops were also roused early and went about securing the hotel, in anticipation of the arrival of a union minister. The Sharad Pawar group, staying at a different hotel about five kilometres away, went in to breakfast at around 9.30, all together in a special room sealed off from the public. Some members chose to stay neutral - and not stay at either of the camp's hotels while several key players were still trickling in, on early morning flights from across the country. There was some doubt that fog could delay flights, but that did not happen.
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