In his chequered administrative career, he saw it all: the good, the bad and the proverbial ugly.
If Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket was revolution that rocked the traditional cricket establishment of Australia, it was the astute business man from Kolkata, who understood the potential of India becoming commercially a global powerhouse of cricket.
His biggest gift to Indian cricket was to strike a multi million television deal with World Tel in the early 90's that went a long way in making BCCI the richest cricketing body in the world.
In his 35 year administrative career that started from being elected as Cricket Association of Bengal working committee member from Rajasthan Club, followed by being the treasurer and subsequently the secretary of the body.
A protege of former BCCI president BN Dutt, he became the treasurer in the mid 1980's and was known as the man who convinced NKP Salve to allow Eden Gardens host the Reliance Cup final at the Eden Gardens instead of Wankhede Stadium.
In 1997, he was elected unanimously as the president of the International Cricket Council (ICC). In 2001, he defeated AC Muttiah to become the BCCI president in one of the most pitched elections in Chennai.
In one of the most political BCCI fight, Dalmiya gave a casting vote in favour of his candidate Ranbir Singh Mahendra to defeat union minister and NCP heavyweight Sharad Pawar by a solitary vote.
However the quartet of Pawar, N srinivasan, Shashank Manohar and Lit Modi with the backing of Bindra came back next year to not only defeat Mahendra but also opened cases against him.
When the spot-fixing scandal broke, he was the first consensus candidate for interim president's post and earlier this year, he again emerged as the man who was found acceptable by one and all to take up the president's mantle.
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