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'We don't want Botham's advice on IPL, we have Gavaskar and Kapil'

September 05, 2014

English cricket legend Ian Botham. Photograph: Philip Brown/Reuters

The Board of Control for Cricket in India has rubbished former England great Ian Botham's criticism of the highly lucrative Indian Premier League, saying he has no locus standi, and advised him to first get his facts right before commenting on the Twenty20 League. 

"Let him get his facts correct first. He has asked how the other boards have allowed IPL to happen. The BCCI has distributed over ten million US dollars as compensation to the other cricket boards for allowing their players to play in the IPL," fumed BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel, when asked for his reaction to Botham's statement at the annual MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture, at Lord's in London, on September 3.

'How on earth did the IPL own the best players in the world for two months a year and not pay a penny to the boards who brought these players into the game?' Botham queried about the league that has revolutionized world cricket by offering players amounts of money undreamt of previously.

Botham also wanted the IPL to be scrapped as he felt it was "too powerful for the long-term good of the game and also claimed that the franchise-based league provides the "perfect opportunity for betting and therefore fixing" and "players are slaves to it". 

'I'm worried about the IPL. In fact, I fear it shouldn't be there at all. It is changing the priorities of world cricket,' the 58-year-old former England captain and all-rounder said in his lecture. 

Patel wondered about Botham's locus standi to comment on the IPL and gently reminded the former England player of his dalliance with disgraced Texas financier Allen Stanford, who promised to set up an IPL-type T20 League, but was then put behind bars in the United States for defrauding investors through a Ponzi scheme, putting an end to his T20 dream. 

"I can still visualise the photo of Botham sitting in the front when Stanford went to England. And he has the temerity to talk about IPL. We don't want his advice. We have enough top players like Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri, Kapil Dev and Rahul Dravid to advice us," he remarked.

Meanwhile, Patel also said it is premature to talk about former Test all-rounder Shastri's services being requisitioned as the Indian team director during the World Cup in early 2015 following his successful stint in the same post in the ongoing ODI series in England, which India have wrapped up after losing the Test series 1-3.

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