Cricket authorities wary that Essel Group wants to take over game
The mysterious registration of companies in Australia and other Test
countries by Indian business giant Essel Group has left cricket
authorities wary about what they believe could be plans for a new rebel
league or even an extraordinary takeover bid for global cricket.

Billionaire media Baron Subhash Chandra |
The International Cricket Council and national bodies are
endeavouring to uncover the motives behind Essel, the conglomerate
behind the ill-fated Indian Cricket League, setting up company names
across the international playing landscape amid internal concerns of a
potential Kerry Packer-like tilt at the game's controls.
In Australia Essel have registered the company Australian Cricket
Control Pty Ltd with the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission, in New Zealand they have attempted to register the name New
Zealand Cricket Limited and in other full and associate member countries
they are understood to have similarly established company names.
It is a development that has left cricket chiefs concerned about a
potential move against the establishment, and intrigued about other
figures who may be behind such a plot.
We're certainly aware of the registration," a Cricket Australia
spokesman said on Friday. "It is a concern but the ICC has been informed
and the matter is being investigated. It's difficult to say more until
we have more information."Sources have told Fairfax Media that Essel,
which is led by billionaire media baron Subhash Chandra, have
contemplated attempting to make a re-entry to the cricket scene six
years after the demise of the unofficial ICL, the rebel precursor to the
Indian Premier League.
Whether that would constitute the creation of a new, ramped-up
version of the ICL or a challenge to the establishment itself has been
unclear, but the formation of companies has been enough to have cricket
authorities on their toes.
ASIC records show that Australian Cricket Control Pty Ltd was
registered on December 17 last year, but the subject is understood to
have been discussed at a meeting of ICC member executives in Dubai last
week.
Much like Kerry Packer's revolutionary World Series Cricket nearly
four decades ago, if any bid to unseat the game's governing bodies was
to eventuate it would have a lot to do with broadcast rights.Essel owns
Zee Entertainment Enterprises, whose subsidiary, Ten Sports, has
international cricket broadcast rights in South Africa, West Indies,
Zimbabwe, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, but does not have a foothold in the
Indian market, where Star Sports has the rights for international
cricket and the Champions League, and Sony televises the IPL.
Players from countries outside the three dominant nations in terms of
financial might - India, England and Australia - would be easier to
convince to join any rebel organisation.
In contrast to the cricket scene in 1977, however, the world's
leading players are phenomenally well paid and would be enormously
difficult to win over even if the suitors were bankrolled by an entity
with such deep pockets as Essel. And while there is disillusionment in
many quarters with the financial structure of the ICC, Essel's track
record in cricket is controversial. The ICL wound up with players
complaining of being out of pocket and later, like the IPL, was the
subject of corruption headlines.
Former New Zealand captain Chris Cairns has pleaded not guilty to
charges of perjury and perverting the course of justice that surrounds
allegations of match fixing against him while he was captaining
Chandigarh Lions in the ICL in 2008. Cairns' former teammate Lou Vincent
admitted rigging games when he played for Chandigarh. Chris Barrett |