Few board members have yet seen the full internal review by PricewaterhouseCoopers
The future of the suspended ICC chief executive Manu Sawhney looks set to be decided at an emergency board meeting on Thursday.
The ICC chairman, Greg Barclay, has called the meeting at which he is expected to update the ICC Board on the conclusions of that disciplinary process and seek their support with the outcomes. Sawhney’s future is understood to be the sole item on the agenda with members notified of the meeting only on Wednesday.
Few board members have currently seen the entire PwC report but one of those who has is the ECB’s chair, Ian Watmore. As chair of the ICC’s human resources committee, he reviewed the report and recommended the suspension of Sawhney. That course of action was subsequently ratified by the board.
The contents of the PwC report are understood to be critical of Sawhney, though at least one ICC director has in recent weeks raised the prospect of asking to see the full report once the Sawhney decision comes to the board. It is believed the report has also looked at the working and culture of the ICC board itself. The environment around the ICC is highly politicised at present, however, with divisions around the future structure of international cricket and the balance of power at the top of the game.
For an event to be accepted in the Olympics, however, it must be played as a recognised international format, which means T10 would have to be far more widely played than it is at present.
Meanwhile, Tajikistan, Mongolia, Ivory Coast and Vietnam are understood to have applied to become Associate Members of the ICC. Their applications will be considered at the ICC’s AGM on July 18.