These days you won't find a dull moment in Bangladesh
cricket. Even without any matches available in international fixtures,
our cricket is making news every now and then. We have had the fair
amount of hullabaloo with the spot-fixing saga and now we are making the
weather heavy with the Dhaka Premier League which is a very popular
league in our country.
The top
cricketers of Bangladesh have threatened to pull out from this year's
Dhaka Premier League as the BCB has proposed a change in the player's
transfer system. According to the new system the players are divided
into seven categories - A+, A, B+, B, C, D and E according to a pay
structure which starts from $28,300 approximately for the A+ category.
A
total of 184 players are included in these categories. A lottery would
decide which club gets to pick first from the top category and after all
the 12 clubs have picked players from that particular category, the
next pick would go to the club who selected last in the first category.
From there it would proceed sequentially in the next categories.
(Source: Dhaka daily Prothom Alo and ESPNcricinfo).
In
the past, the players used to decide the clubs according to their own
wish but after the initiation of this new rule the players' freedom of
choosing their favourite clubs have been dented. The Cricketer's Welfare
Association of Bangladesh (CWAB) complained of the BCB's lack of
communication regarding this issue. Keeping this issue in mind, the BCB
chief Nazmul Hasan said in a press conference on June 19, 2013 that it
will take time to start the Dhaka Premier League in due time because of
the ICC's ACSU report on the BPL spot-fixing. Hasan admitted that there
is an underlying anxiety regarding ACSU's report and there is a risk of
more names getting involved.
The
Dhaka Premier League was supposed to start earlier this year but it has
been re-scheduled to start in July 3 while its players' transfers have
been scheduled for June 23. But this schedule seems to get re-scheduled
again as Hasan expects to receive the ACSU report during the ICC annual
conference which is to be held in London from June 25 to 29.
What
sort of a shock wave this ACSU report going to produce remains a big
worry. If few more big names get trapped then Bangladesh cricket will be
jolted terribly. And with this the Dhaka Premier League's future seems
bleak. Even if it starts lately, it will be severely hampered by the
upcoming monsoon season. So it is very important for the league to
proceed during the dry season.
The
commencement of the Dhaka Premier League is very important for our
cricket. As a matter of fact, since the Zimbabwe tour, our cricketers
are hardly playing any cricket or going to play any competitive cricket
since the October series against New Zealand. If our players don't
engage themselves in any sort of active cricket then this long gap might
take its toll on them. And for which the Dhaka Premier League would
have been very critical in keeping our cricketers busy in playing active
cricket.
In Bangladesh,
traditionally, nothing is solved out without creating any useless drama.
Even a simple matter is made to look like a difficult mathematic
problem. I am not sure how the ACSU report will hamper the start of the
Dhaka Premier League. I am not sure about this complex triangular love
story between the cricketers, cricketer's welfare association and the
BCB; but as a Bangladeshi cricket fan I can only feel that the complex
case of the Dhaka Premier League must be solved as soon as possible as
our cricketers must keep themselves focused in cricket.
If
our boys don't play any sort of active cricket in this long gap then
the engine will cool down and it will be hard to start this engine
during the series against New Zealand.
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