BCCI asks Indian team’s administrative manager Sunil Subramanium to return from West Indies

New Delhi: The axe has finally fallen on Team India manager Sunil Subramanium as he has been asked to return from the ongoing tour of the West Indies at the earliest for misbehaving with bureaucrats in the Caribbean Islands.

Having escaped Down Under after he misbehaved during the Perth Test in December 2018, it was just a matter of time that Sunil Subramanium fell prey to his own conduct and that is exactly what has happened as the Committee of Administrators (CoA) were informed of the issue by senior government officials in India.

Speaking to this agency, a board functionary confirmed the development and said that it would be interesting to see if he is now also barred from contesting for the position of manager — the appointment is set to happen by the end of this month.

“Yes, mails have been exchanged and while Sunil Subramanium has spoken about how it was an inadvertent mistake, the top bosses are pretty clear that he needs to return. Citing stress when you are a representative of the country cannot really be a justification,” stated a senior BCCI functionary here Wednesday.

“As for the role of manager, it remains to be seen if he will be allowed or barred. Depends on how the executives take to his reasoning once he is back in the country. But this isn’t the first time that he has been caught napping when it comes to his conduct as manager of the Indian team and the episode in the Caribbean Islands could be the death knell,” the functionary added.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) had informed the two High Commissions that Subramanium was the go-to-man for a commercial that was to be shot in the Caribbean Island. But when an official from the Indian High Commission in Trinidad & Tobago checked with the manager, Sunil  Subramanium refused to entertain the person.

Earlier, a BCCI functionary had said that earlier instances being ignored led to this situation. And this too would have been ignored if it wasn’t the High Commission and the heat wasn’t on CoA chief Vinod Rai.

“He (Subramanium) was emboldened because no action was taken on account of earlier misdemeanours and only because there is heat on Rai that action is being taken this time,” stated the official.

In fact, even during the recently concluded World Cup, board personnel weren’t too happy with Subramanium’s behaviour.

“Anyone who has interacted with the team manager has been left utterly disappointed with his conduct and approach. Obtaining tickets and passes for his friends seemed to be his primary concern and the positioning of his hat seemed to be the secondary one,” the official asserted.

IANS

 

Exit mobile version