Written on Wednesday, 03 March 2010 00:00
The appointment of John Howard as ICC president from 2012 has produced a chorus of indignation from a predictable array of suspects but many of the charges leveled against him - that he is a cricket nuff-nuff who lacks a feel for the game and has no record of cricket administration - are irrelevant furphies.
He does not need to be able to recite large tracts of the 1948 Wisden, or give you a concise interpretation of the LBW rules, in order to do this job. The past two ICC presidents have proved that a demonstrable lack of cricket ‘pedigree' is no barrier to success in the role. And it is possible the new man in charge, India's Sharad Pawar, whom Howard will succeed in two years, may never have donned the flannels in his life.
According to his biography on Cricinfo: ‘'Pawar's only connection to cricket was a tenuous one - his father-in-law, Sadu Shinde, was a Test leg-spinner who toured England in 1946.'' And like Howard, Pawar is a politician.
Pawar will replace David Morgan as president this year. Morgan is a Welshman who never played the game at any decent level and was, in fact, a former commercial director of a steel company before joining Glamorgan CCC in 1980 as a senior marketing man.
Morgan, in turn, succeeded South African Ray Mali, who happened to be a teacher by profession, and on it goes. All seem to have done a fair to middling job. The point is, you don't need to have played 100 Tests or been a county cricket club secretary since Colin Cowdrey was in his prime to successfully run cricket's governing body.
You just need an abiding love of the game, a proven record of administration and, in a sport increasingly dominated from the sub-continent, a talent for diplomacy. There will be many who quibble with Howard's qualifications on the latter score - and they would probably include Fairfax columnist Peter Roebuck and former Test captain Ian Chappell.
In the lead-up to yesterday's announcement, Roebuck went in to bat for the New Zealand candidate Sir John Anderson - who admittedly sounds as though he would have made an ideal appointment - but couldn't resist a swipe at Howard's knowledge of cricket which, he said, was ‘'more characterised by enthusiasm than depth or imagination''.
Ian Chappell, an outspoken advocate of asylum seekers, who walked out of the Channel Nine commentary box in 2007 in protest when Howard walked in to do a guest commentary spot, has also criticized the appointment. But that sounds like an opinion that has its roots in ideology rather than cricket.
As to Howard's connection with the game, and playing record, sure, his off-spinners are a bit wonky, and one or two even land at his feet. And
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Howard more than qualified as ICC chief

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