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A new ICC rule required that when two teams had jerseys with the same colour, the host country’s team does not need to change its outfit, he said here.
The other team must, however, change its outfit so India chose a uniform of saffron and blue, he added.
“…so, I wore a saffron jacket with a slightly blue pocket handkerchief and that was out of support for (Indian team) them (for the match against England),” he said.
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Answering a question from a participant following his lecture on his “The Great Indian Novel,” inspired by the Mahabarata here, Tharoor asked, “why should I surrender saffron to any political conviction..?”
The participant, pointing to his saffron kurta, asked if he chose it to face “the English (England) cricket team (again).”
The Congress MP from Kerala said as far as he was concerned, “it (saffron) is a very proud Indian colour and it is one of the three colours in the Indian flag…so happy to wear it.”
He said he could watch only two matches because of the Parliamentary session.
In the recent match with England, Indian cricketers had sported a orange-blue jersey.
The lecture was organised by the C P R Institue of Indological Research here as a sequel to its Mahabharata conference held in March this year.