"If you want to cut and paste something out of cricket into other sports it is very simple. Ask this question to the youngster who is training to become an Olympic champion: Is he or she getting the same facility as a player from overseas. In cricket, I don't care what Australia has, what England has, India is up there 90 per cent, so they might have that 10 per cent extra," Shastri said at the FICCI Frames here today.
Acknowledging that television broadcasting has brought in money into sports, Shastri recalled that he was paid Rs 10,000 in 1990 for his last Test match, whereas two years later players were being paid Rs 2.5-3 lakh.
"The system (that BCCI) has is as good as any in the world if not the best. There is an opportunity with the money coming in through television. You are getting more and more facilities for people who did not have facilities like in Ranchi, Visakhapatnam, Dharamsala, Rajkot.
"BCCI were a fantastic body. You would not have had the Tendulkars, the Gavaskars, the Kapil Devs or Ravi Shastri without them being a good body. If you have got a professional body running, the focus is on delivering champions and giving them the best of the facilities, then you can (be good at other sports).
According to an ESP Properties-SportzPower report, sports sponsorship in India stands at Rs 6400 crore, with 80 per cent coming in from cricket.
Shastri said the quality of telecast has taken cricket to a higher level with spidercams and technology making the game interesting.
"It has just helped the game spread and the grassroot level is now getting the attention. That is where you need professionals to make sure the money is spent well where you produce champions," he said.
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