ICC on an imperialistic path to a royal battle (Column: Close-in)
BY YAJURVINDRA SINGH (11:14)
The word 'imperial' has that touch of legacy that one associates so strongly with the British empire of yore. The game of cricket was the domain of that empire and the ICC then was known as the Imperial Cricket Conference, the body that governed cricket around the globe.
The game of cricket when played correctly was defined as the imperial way of playing it. Australia, apparently, through some shrewd field placements, made the first move against the conventional and imperial way of playing the game. South Africa too made their mark by their bowlers mastering the googly.
But the man who played the magical "Indian rope trick" by inventing the leg glance was the first cricket poster boy of the world, Prince Ranjit Sinhji from the Indian state of Nawanagar/Jamnagar. He advertised products in the UK and was the blue eyed cricketer whom people came to watch because of his mystical way of batsmanship.