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Ex-players throwing muck, have insatiable appetite: DDCA to HC

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
DDCA today blamed some former Delhi players of "throwing muck" on it by telling the High Court that they had benefitted from the cricketing body but had an "insatiable appetite" for more and wanted to accommodate their wards or candidates of their academies.

Without naming these ex-cricketers, the Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) said as an "instrument of blackmail," several complaints have been filed at their behest since they could not get their own wards accommodated in the Delhi team.

"It's a pity that much of the muck thrown at DDCA is the handiwork of few of its ex-players alone who ironically were the ones who benefitted and got emboldened from the DDCA the most, but regretfully had the insatiable appetite for more and more and wanted the rules to be bent to accommodate their own wards by pushing the talented ones to the back," DDCA told a bench of justices S Ravindra Bhat and Deepa Sharma.
 

DDCA's submissions came in the backdrop of different factions blaming each other for the mess in the cricket body which has led to the filing of several defamation cases, including one filed by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who was a former DDCA President, against Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and other AAP leaders.

Former cricketer Chetan Chauhan also filed a defamation case against Kejriwal and BJP MP Kirti Azad while some others dragged Bishan Singh Bedi and Surinder Khanna to the courts.

While responding to the recommendations on its functioning made by Justice (retd) Mukul Mudgal, who was appointed as DDCA's observer, the DDCA said they have accepted most of them.

It said some recommendations on "promotion of cricket and selection of players, covering DDCA constitution, selection process, renewal of affiliation of its affiliated clubs, grants given to affiliated clubs, selection committee" came as a "surprise" as Justice Mudgal had not given a hearing to the executive board of directors or sports working committee.

"The very foundation on which the (Mudgal) report was based was without talking to anyone. It is very difficult to ascertain as to how these findings were given (in the recommendations)," senior advocate Aman Lekhi, who appeared for DDCA, told the court.

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First Published: Sep 22 2016 | 7:48 PM IST

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