Former President of Board of Control for Cricket (BCCI) in India Biswanath Dutt, famed as a strict disciplinarian and one who brought the legendary Jagmohan Dalmiya into cricket administration, died at his south Kolkata residence on Monday following prolonged respiratory ailments, family sources said.
Popularly known as B.N. Dutt, the ace sports administrator breathed his last at 7:51 a.m.
Dutt, 92, is survived by his wife, a son Subrata Dutta -- a veteran football administrator -- and a daughter.
Dutt, who served two complete terms as BCCI President from 1988-1990, was in and out of hospital in the recent past when his condition deteriorated due to a lung infection.
Dutt's helming of the BCCI -- that started a year after India successfully co-hosted the Reliance World Cup that also kick-started the money boom and commercialisation of Indian cricket -- bore the mark of a stern administrator.
In 1989, after a dismal West Indies tour, the Indian cricketers went on an unauthorised trip to the USA and Canada to play exhibition matches, and the Dutt-led BCCI responded by debarring six star players including skipper Dilip Vengsarkar, Kapil Dev and Ravi Shastri from domestic and international matches for a year. Six other junior players were let off with a fine.
The board refused to budge despite pressures from various quarters, and finally the aggrieved players moved the Supreme Court, which passed an obiter dictum (expression of opinion uttered in court or in a written judgement, but not legally binding) in their favour.
"After the obiter dictum by a judge, I didn't fight with the court and acknowledged it and withdrew my decision," Dutt later said in an interview to a web portal.
Before taking over the top post in the BCCI, Dutt served as Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) Secretary (1977-81), President (1982-86) and Chairman (1987-1991), and chairman of its trustee board in later years. He was also elected as BCCI Vice President.
In 1977, Dutt brought Dalmiya into cricket administration as CAB Treasurer. Dalmiya later went on to head the BCCI as also the International Cricket Council, and is regarded as the man who brought money to the game.
Dalmiya had time and again acknowledged Dutt's role in bringing him into cricket administration. Long after Dutt had demited office, Dalmiya would still turn to him for advice during every crisis situation and support before crucial elections to the board and the CAB.
However, critics have through the years pointed an accusing finger at Dalmiya for having ensured Dutt's defeat in the BCCI presidential polls in 1991 to Madhav Rao Scindia.
But a veteran CAB official, not wishing to be named, pooh-poohed the allegation. "That's all falsehood. Had it been so, Dalmiya would not have resigned as BCCI secretary a year later, despite Scindia fervently requesting him to stay on".
The astute Dutt had a balanced approach to life.
"He knew when to stop, when to call it a day. We see around us so many people, so very reluctant to leave office. Dutt was an exception.
"He could spot talent, and groomed the next generation of administrators -- both in cricket and football. But for him, maybe we wouldn't have got administrators like Dalmiya or Ashok Ghosh (late All India Football Federation Secretary)," CAB trustee board Chairman and for BCCI Joint Secretary Goutam Dasgupta told IANS.
Dutt was also a successful entrepreneur, and his family business unit The George Telegraph Training Institute continued to grow both in financial terms as also as a leading soccer and cricket club in the Kolkata Maidan.
In fact, it was in soccer that Dutt cut his teeth in sports administration, functioning as Secretary of the Indian Football Association from 1963 to 1975.
His death cast a pall of gloom in the sports fraternity.
Condoling his death, the BCCI called Dutt "an efficient administrator committed to help cricketers and build the profile of the game".
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expressed her "profound grief" and described his demise as "an irreparable loss to the world of sports".
CAB President and former Indian cricket captain Sourav Ganguly described Dutt as a "master administrator".
The CAB office remained closed as a mark of respect to Dutt during the day. Hundreds of cricket officials and fans garlanded his body when it was brought to the Eden Gardens.
--IANS
ssp/nir
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