ADVERTISEMENT

Jay Shah May Eye ICC Chair as Greg Barclay Decides Against Third Term

Barclay on Tuesday opted out of a third term fuelling speculations of Shah's future at the sport's governing body.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>Jay Shah (left), Secretary of Board of Control for Cricket with cricketer&nbsp;Virat Kohli (right)</p></div>
Jay Shah (left), Secretary of Board of Control for Cricket with cricketer Virat Kohli (right)

Current International Cricket Council chairman Greg Barclay on Tuesday opted out of a third term following the end of his tenure on Nov. 30, fuelling speculations on Board of Control for Cricket in India secretary Jay Shah's future at the sport's governing body.

Whether Shah will be interested to throw his hat in the ring will be clear by Aug. 27, the last date for filing nominations for the chairman's post.

An ICC chairman is eligible for three terms of two years each and Barclay, a New Zealand-based attorney, has so far completed four years.

"ICC Chair Greg Barclay confirmed to the Board that he will not stand for a third term and will step down from the post when his current tenure finishes at the end of November. Barclay was appointed as the Independent ICC Chair in November 2020, before being re-elected in 2022," the ICC stated in a media release.

As per ICC rules, the chairman's election comprises of 16 votes and now a simple majority of nine votes is required (51%) for the winner. Earlier, to become the chairman, the incumbent needed to have two-third majority.

"Current directors are now required to put forward nominations for the next Chair by 27 August 2024 and if there is more than one candidate, an election will be held with the term of the new Chair commencing on Dec. 1.'

Shah is considered as one of the most influential faces in the ICC board room. He is currently the head of ICC's all-powerful Finance and Commercial Affairs sub-committee.

He enjoys a lot of goodwill with most of the 16 voting members. Currently, Shah has another one year left as the BCCI secretary before going on a mandatory cooling off period of three years from October, 2025.

As per the BCCI constitution approved by the Supreme Court, an office bearer can stay for six before he needs to go for a cooling off of three years. In all, a person can stay in office for a cumulative period of 18 years— nine in state association and nine in BCCI.

If Shah decides to move to ICC with a year of his secretaryship still left, he will have four years left in the BCCI.

At 35, he could be youngest chairman in the history of ICC.

Jagmohan Dalmiya, Sharad Pawar, N Srinivasan and Shashank Manohar are the Indians who have headed the ICC in the past.

Opinion
BCCI Paid Rs 2,038.55 Crore In GST Revenue Over Two Fiscal Years