New Delhi: BCCI president N Srinivasan might have called his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan as just a cricket enthusiast but Chennai Super Kings opener Michael Hussey has said that the betting accused official was actually running the IPL team.
In his book, Underneath The Southern Cross, Hussey has said that Team owner N Srinivasan had handed the control of the team to Gurunath.
“Our owner was Indian Cements, headed by Mr Srinivasan,” Hussey wrote in his book.
“As he was also on the board of the BCCI, he gave control of the team to his son-in-law Mr Gurunath. He ran the team along with Kepler Wessels, who was coach.”
Former team principal of Chennai Super Kings, Gurunath was charge-sheeted along with 21 others for gambling, cheating and criminal conspiracy, in the spot-fixing case of the Indian Premier League.
Meiyappan was accused of revealing confidential information of his team and using that for betting.
However, Srinivasan and India Cements distanced themselves from Gurunath with the BCCI president calling him just a “cricket enthusiast”.
Gurunath was arrested by Mumbai Police in May and named in betting charge-sheet last month. The Supreme Court is hearing a matter related to Gurunath.
Prior to his arrest, the senior CSK official was involved in the functioning of the Chennai team as he could be spoted in the team dugout, at auction tables. Gurunath also represented himself as the team prinicipal on a verified Twitter account.
After the scandal broke out, a two-member probe panel was constituted by the BCCI and it eventually cleared the Super Kings of any wrongdoing, but Cricket Association of Bihar moved court and procured a stay order.
The apex court had said that Srinivasan, who was reelected as BCCI President in the AGM on Sunday, will not participate in matters relating to IPL and the spot fixing issue. The next hearing will be on October 7. (PTI)