- Weather | Horoscope | Stocks
expressindia web
HomeBlogsCricketAstrologyShoppingTendersClassifieds OpinionsTravel
| Make this your homepage | Archive
Expressindia » Story

BCCI asks Indian players to behave after row

Font Size -

Reuters

Posted online: Thursday , January 31, 2008 at 11:57:54
Updated: Thursday , January 31, 2008 at 12:14:55


New Delhi, January 31: The Indian cricket board (BCCI) has told its players in Australia to behave themselves after the row involving spinner Harbhajan Singh overshadowed an exciting Test series, its secretary Niranjan Shah said on Thursday.

"We have already asked the players, given them instructions not to get into such type of altercations," said Shah, adding that he expected India to put the controversy behind them for the remainder of the tour.

On Tuesday, ICCappeals commissioner John Hansen downgraded the charges against Harbhajan from racial abuse against Australia all-rounder Andrew Symonds to using abusive language due to a lack of evidence.

The off-spinner consequently escaped a three-match suspension and was fined half his match fee for the second Test in Sydney, where the incident took place.

BCCI threatened to abandon the tour if the racial abuse charges stuck and the ICC was left red-faced when Hansen revealed Harbhajan got away lightly because officials informed him of only one of the player's four prior offences.

Shah rejected heavy criticism, especially by the Australian media, that the BCCI flexed its financial muscle and held the game to ransom.

"It was a fair judgement," Shah said. "We don't have to go by what the Australian media says. We've gone by the procedure put in place by the ICC and we accept the judgement."

He denied reports that the BCCI had chartered a flight to fly its players back if Harbhajan was not absolved of racism charges.

"I totally deny reports we were chartering a flight to take the players. These are all media pressure tactics and hype."

Shah was confident the controversy would not affect future India-Australia cricketing ties.

"I don't think this will have any repercussions for the future," he said.

"So many such incidents have happened in the past, there have been heated exchanges in the middle and teams have gone on from there."

Australia won the four-match series 2-1 and will play India in a Twenty20 international in Melbourne on Friday ahead of a Tri-Series one-day tournament that includes Sri Lanka.

Bookmark this Page
  • Digg

    On Digg, users share intersting online content by submitting links to the site. At that point, the Digg audience can vote on whether or not they think it is interesting. Articles with lots of votes, or "diggs," rise up higher on the site's main page and topical subsection pages. Another form of social sharing, this site also lets users categorize the content they are submitting to Digg and label it with descriptions of up to 350 characters. Digg users can also submit comments on each content item submitted to the site.

    To register, go to: http://digg.com/register

    del.icio.us

    At its most basic level, del.icio.us allows users to save their bookmarks online. Del.icio.us also gives users the ability to "tag" their bookmarks with descriptive category names. For example, someone who has bookmarked multiple Web pages that deal with the Washington Nationals baseball team could tag those links with any terms they want, like "baseball," "nationals," "natsfan," etc.

    As members of a "social bookmarking" community, del.icio.us sers can also see how many other people have bookmarked the same pages, and they can look at those users' bookmark collections to find other interesting online content.

    To register, go to: http://del.icio.us/register

    Reddit

    Reddit allows users to submit news articles and other online content to the site. Users also give articles a thumbs-up or thumbs-down. Reddit then uses those votes to build a user profile and to find articles to recommend to you. Users can also submit comments on items posted to the site.

    To register, go to: http://reddit.com/login

Rate this Article
3
Rating
Ads by Google
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views represented here are not neccesarily endorsed by www.expressindia.com and its allied websites. All messages will be moderated and no message that has inflammatory, abusive, derogatory language or any language deemed unfit for publication by the editor will be displayed. Though it will be endeavoured that as many messages as possible be displayed, there will be time lag between the submission and publication of the messages. The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message.
I agree to the terms of use.
Remember..... by Withheld on 02 Feb 2008

Forget the media, BCCI, Australian Cricket Board - it is the Australian public that pays to see a fantastic match between the two countries. Players such as Sachin, Dravid, Ganguly are much admired by the Aussie public. India does not need current 'on field' tactics as portrayed by Harbijan to intimidate the opposition. Team India remember others before you Kapil, Gavaskar were great representatives of your country and are still held in great esteem in OZ. Finally, its not all about money - both teams must remember if you continue to fail to play in the 'spirit of the game' the public (both India

Profesionalism required... by withheld on 31 Jan 2008

It is also important that the BCCI arrange training for the players to impart some 'soft skills' and not just leaving some instructions to behave. It is next to impossible not to react in highly explosive situations and accusations such as that HBS landed in, despite his actions were in good faith and in the spirit of the game. BCCI can not expect everyone to handle it on their own.

NRI businessman killed in UK road mishapMen are tuned to lust says a studyCong downplays RLD decision, says Govt will ...JMM to support UPA in trust vote: Shibu Sore...Mulayam says SP is 'united', slams LeftKapil Dev slams Yuvraj's partying habits
© 2008 Indian Express Newspapers (Mumbai) Ltd. All rights reserved
The Indian Express Group | Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Work With Us | Site Map