In a renewed effort to push for the DRS to be universally implemented in
bilateral series, every member on the ICC chief executives committee
(CEC) barring India backed a change in policy that would see the home
board having the right to choose the use of the DRS in a meeting held in
Dubai on December 4. This marks a major change from the current
situation in which the approval of both teams is required for DRS to be
put into place in a bilateral series.
The CEC suggested the matter must now be resolved via a vote by the
thirteen-strong executive board (ten full members plus three
affiliates), which will meet on January 29 and 30 in Dubai.
"The CEC is requesting the board to reconsider their existing policy.
The majority of the CEC members were in favour of the change. But no one
else except the BCCI opposed the move at the meeting," a member, who
attended the meeting, told ESPNCricinfo. Sanjay Jagdale, the BCCI
secretary, who attended the meeting and disagreed with the fellow CEC
members, declined to comment, saying he cannot speak to the media.
India has been the sole opponent of the DRS, stating that the technology
implemented currently is not 100% foolproof. In a recent interview
with ESPNCricinfo, the BCCI president N Srinivasan made his position
further clear as to why he would not like to change his mind on the DRS.
"I'm not against technology but one should be cautious and we should be
clear what it is that we are trying to achieve. If you say my correct
decision percentage has gone up from 94 to 95.6, is that all you are
looking to achieve? It is relative. But we must understand what has been
the beauty of the game.
"So the sum total of this is: we say, let us leave it as it is. You have
taken bias out of the system, as the umpire by definition is neutral.
Cricket is a game of glorious uncertainties, so why not keep it that
way?," Srinivasan said.
Though Srinivasan denied that the BCCI was bullying some of the fellow
members on the ICC board, an ICC member official said it was unlikely
that India would be deterred by the CEC's new policy initiative. "I do
not necessarily think the chairman of the boards would have the same
view as their chief executives. I think it might come to nothing, quite
frankly," the official said.
This is not the first time the BCCI has opposed the rest of the members
on the DRS. At the ICC's last annual conference in Kuala Lumpur, the CEC
had passed the resolution to make the DRS mandatory for all events. The
move was then passed to the executive board which had to ratify the
decision. But despite the push from the CECs, the head of the full
member boards refrained from putting the issue to vote.
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