Why Jay Shah Was Elected ICC Head: Official Says "Board Doesn't Want..."
Jay Shah got the vote of 15 out of 16 members in the ICC Board to be elected the next ICC chairman.
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Jay Shah will take over as the ICC chairman from December 1, 2024. Jay Shah, at 35, will become the youngest to take over as the chairman of the global governing body. Shah has been serving as the BCCI secretary since October 2019 and chairman of the Asian Cricket Council since January 2021. Jay Shah got the vote of 15 out of 16 members in the ICC Board to be elected the next ICC chairman.
Cricket West Indies CEO Johnny Grave has now talked in details about the reason behind Jay Shah's election.
"The ICC board doesn't want to waste too much time on internal politics. If you look at Jay's leadership at the BCCI, it has been wonderful. He has hosted the Women's Premier League, successfully oversaw the 50-over World Cup in India and has signed huge broadcast deals with IPL and for BCCI,” Cricket West Indies CEO Johnny Grave told The Indian Express.
Meanwhile, former Australia head coach John Buchanan on Thursday urged the International Cricket Council, which will be led by BCCI secretary Jay Shah soon, to take ‘good decisions' for cricket's long-term future.
Buchanan, who coached Australia to two separate runs of world record 16 consecutive Test wins and ODI World Cup wins in 2003 and 2007, said the ICC needs to be address the concerns over growing number of T20 leagues. “It's an interesting question. With Jay Shah now being installed at the head of the ICC, it really is important that the ICC makes some very, very good long-term decisions for the game,” Buchanan told PTI when asked if India and Australia will continue to produce Test cricketers of the same caliber they have thus far.
"We see a proliferation of T20 leagues, T10 leagues, (The) Hundreds and so on... the reality is, that is the future of the game. The young children that we're speaking here today will be inspired by and have a real love for playing that short form of the game,” he said at the launch of 'Ready Steady Go Kids' multi-sport program.
However, Buchanan underlined the importance of Test cricket.
“The game is built on Test cricket. That's the true fabric of the game. For the ICC to make some good decisions, they have to be very, very mindful of how many leagues they approve and sanction, which means by doing that, it will limit the number of leagues that players are drawn to, for a start,” he said.
Buchanan said the ICC will have to find a way to keep the ODI format relevant since it helps in transition between Tests and T20s.
“Test cricket is really important. We've got the proliferation of the short-format game. We need to keep the transition game, which is the one-day game,” he said.
“It's too difficult for players to be able to play quality cricket with only two formats, meaning a short format and a long format. We need that intervening, that transition format of 50-over cricket." Buchanan said players cannot be blamed for trying to make most of the opportunities.
“You want to be well paid for because you're at the top of your game. Who knows how long they've got injury-wise, selection-wise, age-wise…” he later told reporters.
“They've got to try and exploit that and that's what the leagues are offering at the moment. I don't blame them for that.” Buchanan said he anticipates the Australian Test side to undergo a phase of transition after the Border-Gavaskar Trophy later this year.
“I wouldn't be surprised to see a lot of changes in that Australian Test side because most of them are over 30,” he said.