Lodha Committee Report: Use stadiums for tennis, hockey

If the BCCI decides to follow the recommendations on reforms suggested by the Justice R. M. Lodha committee, one could soon find stadiums in Pune, Nagpur, and Rajkot hosting Indian hockey team’s Test matches or tennis team’s Davis Cup games. The Lodha panel, in its report, has recommended that cricket stadiums should be made accessible to other sports such as tennis and hockey, which they feel will generate revenue for the State associations.

Published : Jan 05, 2016 16:43 IST , New Delhi

The four relegated units from Maharashtra and Gujarat will also fall in that purview — a recommendation which many feel is not feasible for all practical purposes.
The four relegated units from Maharashtra and Gujarat will also fall in that purview — a recommendation which many feel is not feasible for all practical purposes.
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The four relegated units from Maharashtra and Gujarat will also fall in that purview — a recommendation which many feel is not feasible for all practical purposes.

If the BCCI decides to follow the recommendations on reforms suggested by the Justice R. M. Lodha committee, one could soon find stadiums in Pune, Nagpur, and Rajkot hosting Indian hockey team’s Test matches or tennis team’s Davis Cup games.

The Lodha panel, in its report, has recommended that cricket stadiums should be made accessible to other sports such as tennis and hockey, which they feel will generate revenue for the State associations.

In fact the four relegated units from Maharashtra and Gujarat will also fall in that purview — a recommendation which many feel is not feasible for all practical purposes.

The above mentioned recommendation is on Page 78 of the Final Report (Volume 1) under the header of ‘Constitution and functioning of Members’.

The Committee recommends: “To make the existing stadia amenable to other sports by providing for alternate surfaces to be laid (Astroturf for hockey, Carpet for tennis, etc) so that income may be generated and there would be all round development of sport, care being taken not to damage the pitch. But they should not be used for public functions where thousands will stomp on the ground.”

The above recommendation relating to State Associations (Full Members) will also be applicable to the four associations relegated to the category of Associate Members and who are entitled to disbursement of grant from the BCCI.

'Is it practical?'

A senior BCCI functionary questioned the logic behind laying astro-turf or a synthetic tennis court where there would be around 12 centre strips that are prepared for matches.

“On one hand, they are saying that you cannot damage the pitch and then you want to lay an astro turf! Also you need to think practically, the distance of the crowd from the action.

A hockey stadium has normally four galleries and it is close to action. How can you lay an astro-turf over grass and have people watch from 80 metres,” said a BCCI official.

When he was reminded that the Brabourne Stadium, in 2006, played host to a Davis Cup tie between India and Pakistan, the official said: “That was the last time tennis was played in a cricket stadium. What is the distance of spectators from real action at Wimbledon or Flushing Meadows? If you have to generate revenue, you cannot do it by organising junior hockey or tennis tournaments. So one needs to look at the practicality of such a recommendation.”

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