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News

'ICC's Test schedule most important' - Modi

The ICC's Future Tours Program (FTP) remains paramount for the Indian Premier League, Lalit Modi, the IPL chairman and commissioner, has told Cricinfo

Ajay S Shankar
Ajay S Shankar
15-Feb-2008

Lalit Modi: "We will all continue to fulfill our commitments to the Future Tours Programme ...[which is] the most important for all countries and most definitely for the BCCI" © AFP
 
The ICC's Future Tours Program (FTP) remains paramount for the Indian Premier League, Lalit Modi, the IPL chairman and commissioner, has told Cricinfo. Modi also reiterated the IPL would strictly follow the two-year freeze on players post their retirement, to prevent a rush of active cricketers towards the financially lucrative Twenty20 league.
"The IPL is here to stay and I am sure it is in everyone's interest that it carves its own place. That does not mean we will play less bilateral cricket. We will all continue to fulfill our commitments to the Future Tours Programme ...[which is] the most important for all countries and most definitely for the BCCI," Modi said. He also made the point that, in most countries, the season ends by March.
There is also a concern that the IPL's economy is on a completely different scale to traditional cricket economies, an imbalance that could harm the game. Modi indicated that the IPL was aimed at protecting cricket's primary position on the subcontinent. "As far as scale is concerned India already has the largest market or appetite for cricket. The IPL will further ensure there is little erosion of support for cricket. Other sports like football have been slowly trying to make inroads, through the English Premier League. We think the IPL will help put a stop to that."
He also downplayed fears, most recently expressed by Australia captain Ricky Ponting, that the IPL would lure experienced cricketers into an early retirement by saying the onus would be on the player's home board. "Even two years after his retirement, the player still needs an NOC [No Objection Certificate] from his home board. Only then will we take him. Our objective is to have players who currently or in the future are playing for their country. So we will always work with other boards to ensure that we are all on the same page."
And with just five days to go for the players' auction in Mumbai, Modi addressed fears expressed by some of the eight franchises by saying they would be kept in the loop at every stage of the IPL's decision-making process. "We need to work with them [franchises]. It's with their success that we will achieve ours. It's not us against them or them against us. We are all on the same side. We will ensure we work with our partners and that's what my job is."

Ajay Shankar is deputy editor of Cricinfo in Bangalore