London: The Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA) will review India’s World Cup performance once skipper Virat Kohli and chief coach Ravi Shastri return to the country and the focus is likely to be on selections made for the big event.
The CoA members led by chairman Vinod Rai, Diana Edulji and Lt Gen (Retd) Ravi Thodge will also have discussions with chairman of selectors MSK Prasad on a roadmap for India for next year’s T20 World Cup in Australia.
“We will certainly have a review meeting once the coach and the captain are back from their breaks. I will not put a date and time but we will speak to them. Also we will speak to selection committee head on road ahead,” Rai told PTI from Singapore.
Virat Kohli and his men will be boarding the flight to Mumbai on Sunday after losing a rain-hit two-day semifinal to underdogs New Zealand by 18 runs on Wednesday.
The CoA chief refused to divulge any further details on the review meeting.
“India’s campaign has just ended. How, when and where are not the questions that I will be able to tell you now,” Rai said.
However, it is learnt that there will be few questions asked of Shastri, Kohli and the selection committee chief.
It is expected that Ambati Rayudu’s handling is likely to come up during the review.
The team management might be asked as to why he was persisted till the final series, at home against Australia, before the World Cup if the selectors were not convinced about him being a certainty for the number four slot.
Rayudu was named a reserve in the World Cup-bound team but wasn’t called even after injury setbacks, something that prompted him to retire from all cricket.
The second issue on the table is likely to be the presence of three wicketkeepers in the side, especially Dinesh Karthik, who has not performed in ODI cricket for a long time and had a wretched IPL.
Karthik, veteran Mahendra Singh Dhoni and the fast-rising Rishabh Pant were all part of the playing XIs in various matches during the World Cup.
Third point of contention could be Dhoni’s batting position in the semifinal loss in Manchester.
The team management is likely to be asked as to why Dhoni was sent at number seven after the team had been reduced to 5/3 in a chase of 240. It has been learnt that batting coach Sanjay Bangar was the one who decided on Dhoni’s slot and Shastri might be asked to give his view on the decision.
While the current five-member selection panel will continue till the BCCI AGM, it is expected that chairman of selectors Prasad will be asked to be more assertive in selection meetings.
It is learnt that fellow selectors Sarandeep Singh and Devang Gandhi have not been giving enough inputs during selection meetings.
“Agreed that none of them have the stature of a Dilip Vengsarkar but together they can still hold their ground on cricketing logic. Neither Sarandeep nor Devang offer any tangible inputs.
“MSK got some respite once Jatin Paranjpe and Gagan Khoda re-joined,” a senior BCCI source said.
In fact, Sarandeep’s presence in India net sessions in the national kit had raised a few eyebrows but did not lead to any major controversy. -PTI
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Very right Sir. determine a formula for determining Rs per ball faced for batters , Rs per wicket for bowlers, Rs per runs saved for fielders, and Rs per catch/ stumping for wicket keepers and grind the team to dust. BTW, determine a formula for Rs spent by you and other COA and your entourage over cashew nuts and bottled water and costs of 5 star stay and travelling for the most useless output that hon’ble SC could have entrusted to any one in living memory. COA with an auditor in chair to repair whats bad in BCCI is like asking a plumber to fix a Boeing 777 in full flight.
Is the CoA still around …
Cricket became ugly coz of involvement of court