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Home  » Cricket » Deccan Chargers remain unsold after 900 cr bid rejected

Deccan Chargers remain unsold after 900 cr bid rejected

Last updated on: September 13, 2012 18:14 IST
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Debt-ridden Deccan Chargers' bid to find a buyer ended in anti-climax on Thursday, with the beleaguered IPL franchise rejecting the only bid it received.

Deccan Chronicle Holdings, the owner of Deccan Chargers, reportedly received a bid of Rs 900 crore from PVP Venture Capitals, but, surprisingly, chose to reject it at the auction, as it considered the price and terms unsuitable.

The BCCI will now wait till September 15, 1700 IST, when its Working Committee meets in Chennai, and decide on the next course of action.

"The price and terms of payments were not acceptable to Deccan Chargers. The BCCI assisted the Deccan Chargers and we also looked at the eligibility criteria, whether they are fit and proper.

The Deccan Chargers team after winning the second edition of the IPL in SOuth Africa"We found that the party was acceptable to us. After that it was between Deccan Chargers and the bidder; there the BCCI was not involved. But they informed us that the price and terms were not suitable, so they didn't accept it," BCCI president N Srinivasan told reporters.

Asked if a new tender will be floated, since the lone bid was rejected, Srinivasan said, "You have to ask Deccan Chargers; now it's up to them. The franchise is on (exist). The BCCI has issued a notice to the franchise to clear certain defects. We have given them some time, but that is between BCCI and the franchise."

The BCCI later issued a statement, saying the Board had no role in Chargers' decision to reject the bid.

"The bid that was received by Deccan Chronicle Holdings Limited met the BCCI's eligibility and suitability criteria. The bid was then reviewed by Deccan Chronicle Holdings Limited who, in its discretion and with no role being played by BCCI, rejected the bid on the basis of the payment terms offered by the bidder," the statement from BCCI secretary Sanjay Jagdale read.

"The Invitation to Tender that was announced on 6 September 2012 by Deccan Chronicle Holdings Limited, under the aegis of BCCI, concluded today under the observation of Mr Narvekar, appointed by the Mumbai High Court," said Jagdale.

The development has put the BCCI in a quandary as it was expecting the franchise to resolve its financial problems by finding a buyer for itself.

A top BCCI official indicated that the Chargers' contract could be terminated at the Working Committee meeting and a new tender could be floated. There was also a possibility that the PVP company could be given the team.

"We will discuss the entire issue now and see what can be done. It is now upto the Working Committee to take a final decision on the issue," the official said.

Another top BCCI official expressed surprise that the bid of Rs 900 crore was rejected by Chargers.

"We are very surprised that a bid of Rs 900 crore-plus has been rejected by Chargers. We thought that for a company that is in financial mess, the offer was a good one as it would have helped them clear their players' payment from the last edition. I guess they are being governed by the banks and that is the reason for rejecting the offer," the official said.

On what will be the next step for the BCCI, he said, "We need to wait till 5pm on September 15 when the time frame of one month given to Deccan Chargers ends. If they don't pay the players' salaries, obviously the team will cease to exist. In any case they did a very wrong thing by mortgaging a BCCI property (IPL team) to the bank."

According to IPL constitution, the BCCI has right to encash the bank guarantee and pay the players' salaries from it. There is a precedence when Kochi Tuskers Kerala team was disbanded and BCCI encashed the bank guarantee.

Deccan Chronicle Holdings purchased the Hyderabad franchise for Rs 428 crore in 2008. At the auction, the base price was said to be around Rs 750 crore.

The winning bidder had to meet BCCI's eligibility criteria and other requirements. This was the first time an entire IPL franchise has been put on the block by its owners, although Rajasthan Royals sold a small stake in 2009 to actress Shilpa Shetty and her husband, Raj Kundra.

According to the tender notice, which had appeared a few days back in national newspapers, "under this invitation to tender issued by DCHL, the winning bidder will acquire from the DCHL on an "as is where is" basis the right to own and operate the IPL team currently known as Deccan Chargers, which is and will continue to be based in Hyderabad and which competes in the Indian Premier League and which has the

opportunity (if applicable and subject to qualification) to compete in each and any CLT20 which is staged from 2013 onwards".

The term "as is where is" means that the new buyer will have to use the name Deccan Chargers and will have to clear the liabilities of the current owner.

According to the IPL constitution, five per cent of the bidding amount will be acquired by the BCCI.

Earlier in June, DCHL had appointed investment banking institution, Religare to find a potential buyer but they were unable to find one, who would readily buy the team with its financial liabilities.

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