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  1. Narayanaswami Srinivasan (born 3 January 1945) [4][5] is an Indian industrialist and former cricket administrator. He was the Chairman of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the President of the BCCI, the governing body for cricket in India.

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  2. N. Srinivasan is an Indian industrialist and the Managing Director of India Cements Limited (ICL), which owns IPL franchise Chennai Super Kings. He also remained the Chairman of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the President of BCCI.

  3. Narayanaswami Srinivasan (born 3 January 1945) is an Indian industrialist and former cricket administrator. He was the Chairman of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the President of the BCCI, the governing body for cricket in India.

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  5. With his carefully calculated rise through the BCCI, Narayanaswami Srinivasan had became one of the most influential cricket administrators by end of the first decade of the 2000s.

    • Male
    • February 3, 1945
    • India
    • The 2019 Election
    • ‘Srini’S Word Still Counts’
    • Control of South Zone
    • How A Scandal Hit Srini
    • Bending The Rulebook
    • The Jaitley Factor
    • India Cements Legacy
    • Health, Age Factors

    In the preceding BCCI set-up, which came into being in October 2019, there were two office-bearers from South Zone — IPL Governing Council Chairman Brijesh Patel (Karnataka) and Joint Secretary Jayesh George (Kerala). At that time, Srinivasan headed one of the four groups that joined hands to avoid elections and formed a coalition to get “democracy...

    Even in the changed dynamics of Indian cricket administration, with several new north-eastern states, Uttarakhand and Bihar (readmission) having become full members, Srinivasan’s grip has not completely loosened on the BCCI, insist his supporters. “In general, I can tell you that every person I meet in the BCCI has only good things to say about him...

    It is widely believed that Srinivasan controls either all seven state associations in the South Zone or a majority of them, besides a few elsewhere in the country, like Haryana. Although the equations change from time to time within the BCCI, historically, Srinivasan’s sway in the South Zone has been a constant. However, there have been a few voice...

    No one can say for sure how long Srinivasan would have ruled the BCCI — and by extension world cricket — had the IPL betting-fixing scandal not surfaced in mid-2013 and ended his innings. Having been elected as BCCI president in 2011, he couldn’t complete his term as circumstances forced him to “step aside” from BCCI and ICC affairs. While hearing ...

    Irrespective of the two IPL issues concerning him, Srinivasan could well have become the first man to have a second term as BCCI president in independent India after his tenure, which was to end in 2013. At the time, a BCCI office-bearer (excluding the five zonal vice-presidents) had two-year terms and a third one if elected, and they (barring vice...

    Interestingly, two years after the amendment, Shashank Manohar, whom Srinivasan had succeeded as president in 2011, claimed that the amendments were made to enable politician Arun Jaitley become BCCI president in 2014. Jaitley, by mid-2014, had become the Union finance minister and had left cricket administration. Had Srinivasan not have faced the ...

    Srinivasan is vice-chairman and managing director of India Cements, the company that has given him both power and authority. Apart from being a leading cement company, India Cements has been patronising cricket and cricketers. Srinivasan carried on his company’s legacy and this helped him get a strong foothold in cricket administration. He became T...

    While there is no match to Srinivasan’s experience in cricket administration, the chemical engineer’s age and health are turning out to be impediments. He turns 78 on January 3, and has been having vision issues for some time. “The main thing is age; it counts. Definitely, health also counts,” underlines Phadke, a staunch Srinivasan loyalist. Ramas...

  6. May 25, 2013 · A timeline of N Srinivasan's rise to power in the BCCI and some major decisions that he enforced. Learn about his involvement in IPL, DRS, Sahara, Woolf report and spot-fixing controversies.

  7. T. N. Srinivasan, in full Thirukodikaval Nilakanta Srinivasan (27 March 1933 – 11 November 2018), [4][5] was an Indian economist who had taught and worked in the United States. He was the Emeritus Samuel C. Park Jr. Professor of Economics at Yale University. [6]