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How Jagmohan Dalmiya changed cricket for India

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Boria Majumdar
Boria MajumdarSep 21, 2015 | 09:51

How Jagmohan Dalmiya changed cricket for India

I shared a very personal relationship with Jagmohan Dalmiya, one which went beyond cricket and stretched back to more than a decade and a half. As a student working on Indian cricket history, it was Dalmiya who helped me with access to the BCCI's archives and also the board's balance sheets in a rare first for Indian cricket. Answering the many hundred queries that I had, he never lost his cool, the hallmark of a seasoned administrator. In situations where the query bordered on the politically incorrect, all he would say is "Let me look into it and get back."

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My first meeting with him was rather strange. Back home for field research in March 2001, I landed up at the Cricket Association of Bengal wearing a T-shirt and chappals. I had pages of questions for Dalmiya on the lack of transparency in Indian cricket and was rather aggressive to start with. It was the immediate aftermath of the match-fixing scandal and I was out to expose the rot. Dalmiya, after giving me a patient hearing, asked if I would dress the same way if I wanted to research the MCC's archives. "You said you are from Oxford. I am sure you have been to Lord's. So do they allow you to go in chappals?" he asked. And if not why was it that I was doing it differently at the Eden Gardens? I knew I was up against it. And he had said it all with a smile on his face.

A champion of real politik, he has won many a difficult battle as cricket administrator. However, his most enduring legacy would surely be the fact that it was Dalmiya who made cricket the cash rich sport that it is today. Selling the telecast rights for the 1996 World Cup for ten million dollars to World Tel, a first in world cricket, when he took over as ICC chief the its balance was a poor 16 thousand pounds. When he relinquished the position the balance had shot up to 16 million. Converting the Indian board into the richest cricket board in the world and making India the financial power centre of the world game, Jagguda, as we all knew him as, would forever be remembered in the echelons of Indian and world cricket. Not simply as one more administrator who did good for the game but as a very special one who changed the face of the game forever.

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Last updated: September 21, 2015 | 15:32
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