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Following the constitutional amendment in 2022, the secretary is the most influential office-bearer in the BCCI, having “all powers in relation to cricketing and non-cricketing matters” with the CEO working under his supervision.
Shah was elected unopposed for the ICC top position in August and the stakeholders have been wondering ever since how the transition process will take place.
Gujarat’s Anil Patel and current BCCI joint secretary Devjit Saikia could replace Shah in the BCCI. The name of DDCA president Rohan Jaitley was also floated but remained just speculation.
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“There are issues that need to be dealt with on a day to day basis and anyone who comes in, needs to have a bit of knowledge on how the BCCI is run,” he added.
From the time an elected office-bearer resigns, the board has 45 days to call for a Special General Meeting and choose his successor.
If one calculates the 45 days from the day Shah took charge of ICC, the board has time till mid-January to fill up the position.
The BCCI also needs to appoint an electoral officer at least four weeks prior to the election, as per the constitution.
A senior state unit official said the board has ample time to complete the transition.
“Transition should have been complete by now. The secretary has to sign majority of documents. This matter should have been taken up at the AGM (in September) but nobody questioned at that time,” said the official.
“There is a power vacuum right now at the BCCI, the most powerful cricketing body in the world,” added another office-bearer of a state unit.
With the current three-year term of officer-bearers coming to end in September next year, the incoming secretary will be in charge for close to one year.
There is also no word yet on who the new BCCI representative in the ICC board would be. Shah held that position too and Board president Roger Binny is in the list of alternate directors.
IPL chairman Arun Dhumal is India’s representative in the ICC’s Chief Executives’ Committee.