Once bitten ever shy seems to be the policy of the Cricket Board vis-a-vis its
selection of the national coach in the aftermath of the disastrous Graham Ford
episode a few months ago.
"We have been receiving applications from candidates and the deadline is
September 15 after which they will be scrutinised, a short resume of each candidate
prepared and sent to the members of the special committee formed to select the
coach," BCCI secretary Niranjan Shah said today.
"We will then convene a meeting of the committee. All
these are subject to us getting applications from the right candidates,"
the BCCI official said.
"Hopefully the process (of coach selection) will get over
before the start of the seven-match ODI series against (World Cup Champions)
Australia," Shah added.
The BCCI had issued a media statement on August 27 detailing
the requirements for the new India coach, a post that has been lying
vacant since the departure of Greg Chappell in the aftermath of the World
Cup fiasco.
The board's endeavour to appoint a successor to the former
Aussie captain ended in a disaster when South African Ford came to Chennai to
meet the members of the BCCI's coach appointment committee in June.
Ford, coach of English county Kent, seemingly accepted the
offer, but then did an about turn once he returned to England that left BCCI,
which had already announced him as its new coach, totally embarrassed.
The board had to fall back on India's former Test captain Chandu
Borde to be the cricket manager as a stop-gap arrangement on the ongoing tour
of England.
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