Dubai, April 16, 2012: The ICC Executive Board held the second of its scheduled 2012 meetings in Dubai this weekend. The major items considered and/or decisions taken were as follows.
ICC President, Chairman and Chief Executive
Following a Board resolution agreed at the last meeting, the directors confirmed the necessary amendments to the constitution to split the role of the ICC President and Chairman of the Board. The amended Articles will now be placed before the ICC Annual Conference in Kuala Lumpur at the end of June for consideration and approval. In summary the key changes would give effect to the following:
• The role of the ICC President will be reformed after the Annual Conference in 2014 to separate the Chairman of the Board position from that of the ICC President. Until then, the current roles for the ICC President and Vice president will remain, after which the Vice-Presidency will cease to exist and a new Chairman of the Board post created;
• The term of office for the new ceremonial role for the President will be one year and will rotate, as it currently does, amongst the Members. The President will not be a voting member of the Board;
• The Chairman, who will be appointed by the Board for a maximum of six years (3 x two year terms) will also be non-voting;
Until the President’s role has been confirmed, the joint nomination of the Bangladesh Cricket Board and Pakistan Cricket Board for the role of vice president 2012-14 was deferred until the amended Articles have been considered by ICC Annual Conference.
The Nominations Committee reported that they have arrived at a shortlist of four candidates who will be interviewed in due course to replace Mr Haroon Lorgat, the current ICC Chief Executive, who vacates his position at the end of the Annual Conference in June 2012.
ICC Cricket Committee 2012-14 appointments
In relation to the post of Chairman of the ICC Cricket Committee, the ICC Board decided to review the current terms of appointment. This review will cover potential remuneration and also the current restraints on the chairman in relation to media roles.
In the meantime Mr Clive Lloyd, whose term as chairman had recently expired, will be requested to continue until the ICC Annual Conference in June. The Board also ratified the following appointments from the Chief Executives’ Committee (“CEC”):
• re-appoint Ms Clare Connor, the current chairperson of the ICC Women’s Committee, for a second three-year term;
• re-appoint Ravi Shastri for a second three-year term representing the media;
• appoint David White, the New Zealand Cricket chief executive, as the CEC representative; and
• appoint John Stephenson as MCC’s representative.
Twenty20 strategy
The ICC Board received a report of the strategic discussions held at the Chief Executive’s Committee (CEC) in March 2012 and confirmed the following recommendations
• to increase, from 2014 onwards, the number of teams participating in the ICC World T20 from 12 to 16 men’s teams;
• the event should remain a joint men’s and women’s event;
• three additional Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is) may be played in the year in which the ICC World Twenty20 is being staged provided there is a corresponding reduction in the maximum number of permitted ODIs (as per ICC Scheduling guidelines-the current regulations permit a maximum of 12 T20Is for each Full Member in any one year).
Mr Lorgat said: “The need to manage volume of cricket was considered when agreeing to allow the additional T20Is to be played in a year.”
Independent Governance Review – Woolf Report
Having considered several options to deal constructively with the Woolf Report, the ICC Board agreed that, in the first instance, there was a real need for further discussion among the Directors and Members in an effort to build consensus. In addition to already agreeing the split to the President/Chairman’s role and creating targeted funding for Members in line with the Woolf recommendations, the Directors were keen to begin discussion among themselves to develop a clearer understanding of the role of the ICC.
The Directors committed to hold more informal discussions amongst themselves and their Member Boards in preparation for further discussions at the next Board meeting in June.
Mr Lorgat said: “Change in any form is challenging and it would be unrealistic to expect immediate decisions. This was the Board’s first opportunity to discuss the report and it is encouraging that there is a willingness to engage in difficult and significant governance matters.”
Update on ICC events – pre and post 2015
The Board confirmed the hosting for the ICC World Twenty20 2014 qualifying tournament in the United Arab Emirates in October 2013 and the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 qualifying event in New Zealand in 2014.
The ICC has already commenced with planning for its new rights cycle post 2015 and a key prerequisite of this is to determine the ICC events that will be staged. The Board has agreed the following events schedule:
Year | Event | Format |
2016 |
ICC World Twenty20 | Men 16 teams, 39 games
Women’s 8 teams, 15 games |
2017 |
ICC World Test Championship | 4 teams, 3 games |
2018 |
ICC World Twenty20 (tbc) | Men 16 teams, 39 games
Women’s 8 teams, 15 games |
2019 |
ICC Cricket World Cup | 10 teams, 48 games |
2020 |
ICC World Twenty20 | Men 16 teams, 39 games
Women’s 8 teams, 15 games |
2021 |
ICC World Test Championship | 4 teams, 3 games |
2022 |
ICC World Twenty20 (tbc) | Men 16 teams, 39 games
Women’s 8 teams, 15 games |
2023 |
ICC Cricket World Cup | 10 teams, 48 games |
Other Events:
Year | Event | Format |
2015 |
ICC World T20 Qualifier | 16 teams, 72 games |
2016 |
ICC U19 Cricket World Cup | 16 teams, 48 games |
2017 |
ICC Women’s World Cup | 8 teams, 25 games |
|
ICC World T20 Qualifier (tbc) | 16 teams, 72 games |
2018 |
ICC U19 Cricket World Cup | 16 teams, 48 games |
|
ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier | 10 teams, 48 games |
2019 |
ICC World T20 Qualifier | 16 teams, 72 games |
2020 |
ICC U19 Cricket World Cup | 16 teams, 48 games |
2021 |
ICC Women’s World Cup | 8 teams, 25 games |
|
ICC World T20 Qualifier (tbc) | 16 teams, 72 games |
2022 |
ICC U19 Cricket World Cup | 16 teams, 48 games |
|
ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier | 10 teams, 48 games |
2023 |
ICC World T20 Qualifier | 16 teams, 72 games |
Other decisions
Other decisions included confirmation to proceed with a high-level evaluation of cricket’s participation in multi-sport games; the necessity for women’s cricket to play at least 3 ODIs or 3 T20s in a calendar year (excluding ICC funded events) in order to retain their ODI and T20 status; and, following an independent study, that the current Reliance ICC Rankings are fit for the purposes of determining qualification to ICC events and for promotion/relegation purposes. The Board also adopted the de Speville report on the ICC Anti-Corruption and Security Unit and the recommendations will now be implemented.
The ICC Board consists of the president or chairman from each of the 10 Full Members plus three Associate Member representatives. Also present at ICC Board meetings is the ICC President, who chairs proceedings, the ICC Chief Executive and the ICC Vice-President, as well as by invitation, the ICC Principal Advisor.
Sharad Pawar ICC President
Alan Isaac ICC Vice-President
Haroon Lorgat ICC Chief Executive
Zaka Ashraf Pakistan
Dr Willie Basson South Africa
Peter Chingoka Zimbabwe
Giles Clarke England and Wales
Wally Edwards Australia
Dr Julian Hunte West Indies
Mustafa Kamal Bangladesh
Imran Khwaja Associate Member Representative
Nuski Mohamed Sri Lanka (alternate for Upali Dharmadasa)
Chris Moller New Zealand
Keith Oliver Associate Member Representative
Neil Speight Associate Member Representative
Narayanaswami Srinivasan India
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