...
...
Next Story

Oz, NZ PMs back Howard; Pawar hits back at critics

Divisions within the ICC, on Friday, deepened with Prime Ministers of Australia and New Zealand asking John Howard not to withdraw his candidacy for the vice-President's post even as new President Sharad Pawar hit back at his detractors saying the former Aussie PM did not have the numbers.

Updated on: Jul 02, 2010 05:46 PM IST
Advertisement

Divisions within the ICC, on Friday, deepened with Prime Ministers of Australia and New Zealand asking John Howard not to withdraw his candidacy for the vice-President's post even as new President Sharad Pawar hit back at his detractors saying the former Aussie PM did not have the numbers.

HT Image
HT Image

A day after the ICC conclave in Singapore, Howard got the backing of Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard who said he should give it another shot despite being rejected by the powerful Asian Bloc, raising speculation of a race divide.

Pawar, however, rubbished suggestions that rejection of Howard's candidacy would divide world cricket. "The majority did not support him. Ultimately in any democratic organisation, there has to be support from the majority but that was not there in his case," he told reporters.

Asked whether the rejection would divide world cricket, Pawar said, "I don't think so. We have discussed the matter individually and collectively with everybody including Australia, England and New Zealand. We took a collective decision."

Cricket Australia and New Zealand Cricket are already seething in anger over Howard's rejection and Gillard and Kiwi PM John Key echoed the sentiment. "John Howard, passionate, passionate cricket fan. I share some of the concerns he's voiced publicly about the kind of factors that are influencing this decision," Gillard told 'Fairfax Radio on Friday. "I'd be very happy to offer full support for John Howard to get this role," she said.

New Zealand Cricket chief executive Justin Vaughan has also backed Howard. "We were single-heartedly behind John Howard. NZC is held up as a model of good governance in terms of having independent directors who do what is best for cricket ... but that obviously doesn't apply to the ICC and that is shame," he fumed.

However, Zimbabwe Cricket chief Peter Chingoka justified the rejection saying that the former Australian Prime Minister was not experienced enough for the job.

 
Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill.
Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe