Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Base Ball Rules

Rules and Regulations of Little League Baseball

Baseball Rule Myths

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1. The hands are considered part of the bat.

2. The batter-runner must turn to his right after over-running first base.

3. If the batter breaks his wrists when swinging, it's a strike.

4. If a batted ball hits the plate first it's a foul ball.

5. The batter cannot be called out for interference if he is in the batter's box.

6. The ball is dead on a foul-tip.

7. The batter may not switch batter's boxes after two strikes.

8. The batter who batted out of order is the person declared out.

9. The batter may not overrun first base when he gets a base-on-balls.

10. The batter is out if he starts for the dugout before going to first after a dropped third strike.

11. If the batter does not pull the bat out of the strike zone while in the bunting position, it's an automatic strike.

12. The batter is out if a bunted ball hits the ground and bounces back up and hits the bat while the batter is holding the bat.

13. The batter is out if his foot touches the plate.

14. The batter-runner is always out if he runs outside the running lane after a bunted ball.

15. A runner is out if he slaps hands or high-fives other players, after a homerun is hit over the fence.

16. Tie goes to the runner.

17. The runner gets the base he's going to, plus one on a ball thrown out-of-play.

18. Anytime a coach touches a runner, the runner is out.

19. Runners may never run the bases in reverse order.

20. The runner must always slide when the play is close.

21. The runner is always safe when hit by a batted ball while touching a base.

22. A runner may not steal on a foul-tip.

23. It is a force out when a runner is called out for not tagging up on a fly ball.

24. An appeal on a runner who missed a base cannot be a force out.

25. A runner is out if he runs out of the baseline to avoid a fielder who is fielding a batted ball.

26. Runners may not advance when an infield fly is called.

27. No run can score when a runner is called out for the third out for not tagging up.

28. A pitch that bounces to the plate cannot be hit.

29. The batter does not get first base if hit by a pitch after it bounces.

30. If a fielder holds a fly ball for 2 seconds it's a catch.

31. You must tag the base with your foot on a force out or appeal.

32. The ball is always immediately dead on a balk.

33. If a player's feet are in fair territory when the ball is touched, it is a fair ball.

34. The ball must always be returned to the pitcher before an appeal can be made.

35. With no runners on base, it is a ball if the pitcher starts his windup and then stops.

36. The pitcher must come to a set position before a pick-off throw.

37. The pitcher must step off the rubber before a pick-off throw.

38. If a fielder catches a fly ball and then falls over the fence it is a homerun.

39. The ball is dead anytime an umpire is hit by the ball.

40. The home plate umpire can overrule the other umps at anytime.




HANDS RULE MYTH

The hands are part of a person's body. If a pitch hits the batter's hands the ball is dead; if he swung at the pitch, a strike is called (NOT a foul). If he was avoiding the pitch, he is awarded first base.

Rules: 2.00 PERSON, TOUCH, STRIKE (e) and 6.05(f) Official Baseball Rules




RIGHT TURN RULE MYTH

The batter-runner may turn left or right, provided that if he turns left he does not make an attempt to advance. An attempt is a judgment made by the umpire. The requirement is that the runner must immediately return to first after overrunning or oversliding it.

Rule: 7.08(c and j) Official Baseball Rules




BREAKING WRISTS RULE MYTH

A strike is a judgment by the umpire as to whether the batter attempted to strike the ball. Breaking the wrists, or the barrel of the bat crossing the plate are simply guides to making the judgment of an attempt, these are not rules.

Rule: 2.00 STRIKE Official Baseball Rules




HIT PLATE RULE MYTH

The plate is in fair territory. There is nothing special about it. If a batted ball hits it, it is treated like any other batted ball.




BATTER BOX INTERFERENCE RULE MYTH

The batter's box is not a safety zone. A batter could be called out for interference if the umpire judges that interference could or should have been avoided.

The batter is protected while in the box for a short period of time. After he has had time to react to the play he could be called for interference if he does not move out of the box and interferes with a play.

Many people believe the batter's box is a safety zone for the batter. It is not. The batter MAY be called out for interference although he is within the box. The key words, impede, hinder, confuse or obstruct apply to this situation.

An umpire must use good judgment. The batter cannot be expected to disappear. If he has a chance to avoid interference after he has had time to react to the situation and does not, he is guilty. If he just swung at a pitch, or had to duck a pitch and is off-balance, he can't reasonably be expected to then immediately avoid a play at the plate. However, after some time passes, if a play develops at the plate, the batter must get out of the box and avoid interference. The batter should always be called out when he makes contact and is outside the box.

Rules: 2.00 INTERFERENCE, 6.06(c) Official Baseball Rules.





FOUL-TIP RULE MYTH

There is nothing foul about a foul-tip. If the ball nicks the bat and goes sharp and direct to the catcher's hand or glove and is caught, this is a foul-tip by definition. A foul-tip is a strike and the ball is alive. It is the same as a swing-and-miss. If the ball is not caught, it is a foul ball. If the nicked pitch first hits the catcher somewhere other than the hand or glove, it is not a foul-tip, it is a foul ball.

Rules: 2.00 FOUL-TIP, STRIKE Official Baseball Rules




SWITCH BOX RULE MYTH

The batter can switch boxes at any time, provided he does not do it after the pitcher is ready to pitch.

Rule: 6.06(b) Official Baseball Rules




OUT OF ORDER RULE MYTH

The PROPER batter is the one called out. Any hit or advance made by the batter or runners due to the hit, walk, error or other reason is nullified. The next batter is the one who follows the proper batter who was called out.

Rule: 6.07(b, 1) Official Baseball Rules




OVERRUN FIRST BASE RULE MYTH

Rule 7.08(c and j) simply state that a batter-runner must immediately return after overrunning first base. It doesn't state any exceptions as to how the player became a runner. It could be a hit, walk, error or dropped third strike.

In Little League the runner may overrun. In FED rules he may not and in Professional baseball, he may not. In other programs that use the OBR he may if that is how the program rules it.

To overrun means that the runners momentum carried him straight beyond the base after touching it. It does not mean to turn and attempt to advance. Nor does it mean that he stepped over it or stopped on it and then got off of it.

See Official Baseball Rules




DROPPED THIRD STRIKE RULE MYTH

The batter may attempt first base anytime prior to entering the dugout or a dead ball area.

The batter becomes a runner when the third strike is not caught. Therefore, if there are 2 outs and there is a runner at first, first and second, or bases loaded, the batter creates a force by becoming a runner. These runners are all forced to advance and an out may be obtained by making a play on any one of them. If the bases are loaded the catcher may step on home or throw to third, second or first.

Rule: 6.05(c), 6.09(b) Casebook interpretation Official Baseball Rules.




BUNTING STRIKE RULE MYTH

A strike is an attempt to hit the ball. Simply holding the bat over the plate is not an attempt. This is umpire judgment.

Rule 2.00 STRIKE Official Baseball Rules

Rule 2.00 BUNT is a batted ball not swung at, but INTENTIONALLY met with the bat.

The key words are "intentionally met"

If no attempt is made to make contact with a ball outside the strike zone, it should be called a ball. An effort must be made to intentionally meet the ball with the bat.




SECOND BAT HIT RULE MYTH

The rule says the BAT cannot hit the ball a second time. When the BALL hits the bat, it is not an out. Also, when the batter is still in the box when this happens, it's treated as simply a foul ball. If the batter is out of the box and the bat is over fair territory when the second hit occurs, the batter would be out.

Rules: 6.05(h) and 7.09(b) Official Baseball Rules




FOOT TOUCHES PLATE RULE MYTH

To be out, the batter's foot must be ENTIRELY outside the box when he contacts the pitch and the ball goes fair or foul. He is not out if he does not contact the pitch. There is no statement about touching the plate. The toe could be on the plate and the heel could be touching the line of the box, which means the foot is not entirely outside the box.

Rule: 6.06(a) Official Baseball Rules




RUNNING LANE RULE MYTH

The runner must be out of the lane AND cause interference. He is not out simply for being outside the lane. He could be called for interference even while in the lane. This is a judgment call.

The runner may step out of the lane a step or two before the base if he moves from within the lane to out of it. If he is out of the lane the whole distance to the base and is hit with a throw, he should be out.

Rules: 2.00 INTERFERENCE, 6.05(k), 7.09(k) Official Baseball Rules




HIGH FIVE RULE MYTH

The ball is dead on a homerun over the fence. You can't be put out while the ball is dead except when you pass another runner.

Rules: 5.02, 7.05(a) Official Baseball Rules




THE TIE RULE MYTH

There is no such thing in the world of umpiring. The runner is either out or safe. The umpire must judge out or safe. It is impossible to judge a tie.


OUT-OF-PLAY BALL RULE MYTH

When a fielder other than the pitcher throws the ball into dead ball area, the award is 2 bases. The award is from where the runners were at the time of the pitch if it is the first play by an infielder before all runners have advanced or from where each runner was physically positioned at the time the ball left the throwers hand on all other plays.

Rule: 7.05(g) Official Baseball Rules




COACH TOUCH RULE MYTH

Rule 7.09(I) says the runner is out if the coach PHYSICALLY ASSISTS the runner. Hand slaps, back pats or simple touches are not physical assists.




REVERSE BASERUNNING RULE MYTH

In order to correct a base running mistake, the runner MUST retrace his steps and retouch the bases in reverse order. The only time a runner is out for running in reverse, is when he is making a travesty of the game or tries to confuse the defense.

Rules: 7.08(I), 7.10(b) Official Baseball Rules




MUST SLIDE RULE MYTH

There is no "must slide" rule. When the fielder has the ball in his possession, the runner has two choices; slide OR attempt to get around the fielder. He may NOT deliberately or maliciously contact the fielder, but he is NOT required to slide.

If the fielder does not have possession but, is in the act of fielding, and contact is made, it is a no-call unless the contact was intentional and malicious.

Rule: 7.08(a, 3) this rule does not apply to professionals.




HIT BY BALL ON BASE RULE MYTH

The bases are in fair territory. A runner is out when hit by a fair batted ball while touching a base, except when hit by an infield-fly or after the ball has passed a fielder and no other fielder had a play on the ball.

If the runner is touching first or third, he is not out unless the ball touches him over fair territory. If one foot is on the base and the other is in foul ground and he is hit on the foul ground foot, he is not out. It is a foul ball. (If the ball has not passed beyond first or third.)

Rules: 5.09(f), 7.08(f) Official Baseball Rules




NO STEAL ON FOUL-TIP RULE MYTH

There is nothing foul about a foul-tip. If the ball nicks the bat and goes to the catcher's glove and is caught, this is a foul-tip by definition. A foul-tip is a strike and the ball is alive. It is the same as a swing-and-miss. If the ball is not caught, it is a foul ball.



Rules: 2.00 FOUL-TIP, STRIKE Official Baseball Rules





FLY BALL FORCE OUT RULE MYTH

A force play is when a runner is forced to advance because the batter became a runner. When the batter is out on a caught fly, all forces are removed. An out on an a failure to tag-up, is NOT a force out. Any runs that cross the plate before this out will count.



Rules: 2.00 FORCE PLAY, 4.09 Official Baseball Rules





MISSED BASE APPEAL RULE MYTH

A runner must touch all the bases. If the runner misses a base to which he was forced because the batter became a runner and is put out before touching that base, the out is still a force play. If this is the third out, no runs may score. The base can be touched or the runner can be touched, either way it's a force out.



Rules: 2.00 FORCE PLAY, TAG, 7.08(e), 7.10(b) Official Baseball Rules





OUT OF THE BASELINE RULE MYTH

The runner MUST avoid a fielder attempting to field a BATTED ball. A runner is out for running out of the baseline, only when attempting to avoid a tag.



Rules: 7.08(a), 7.09(L) Official Baseball Rules





NO ADVANCE ON INFIELD FLY RULE MYTH

An Infield-fly is no different than any other fly ball in regard to the runners. The only difference is that they are never forced to advance because the batter is out whether the ball is caught or not.



Rules: 2.00 INFIELD-FLY, 6.05(e), 7.10(a) Official Baseball Rules





NO RUN ON THIRD OUT RULE MYTH

Yes it can. This is not a force play. A force play is when a runner is forced to advance because the batter became a runner. When the batter is out on a caught fly, all forces are removed. An out on an a failure to tag-up, is NOT a force out. Any runs that cross the plate before this out will count.



Rules: 2.00 FORCE PLAY, 4.09, 7.10(a) Official Baseball Rules





NO HIT ON BOUNCED PITCH RULE MYTH

A pitch is a ball delivered to the batter by the pitcher. It doesn't matter how it gets to the batter. The batter may hit any pitch that is thrown. A pitch that bounces before reaching the plate may never be a called strike or a legally caught third strike.



Rule: 2.00 PITCH. (If the ball does not cross the foul line, it is not a pitch.)



NO FIRST BASE ON BOUNCED PITCH RULE MYTH

A pitch is a ball delivered to the batter by the pitcher. It doesn't matter how it gets to the batter. If the batter is hit by a pitch while attempting to avoid it, he is awarded first base.



Rules: 2.00 PITCH, 6.08(b).





2 SECOND CATCH RULE MYTH

A catch is legal when the umpire judges that the fielder has COMPLETE control of the ball. The release of the ball must be voluntary and intentional.



Rule: 2.00 CATCH Official Baseball Rules





FOOT TAG RULE MYTH

You can tag a base with ANY part of the body.



Rules: 2.00 FORCE PLAY, PERSON, TAG, 7.08(e) Official Baseball Rules

















DEAD BALL ON BALK RULE MYTH

In Federation rules it is, not in any others. If a throw or pitch is made after the balk call, the ball is delayed dead. At the end of the play the balk may be enforced or not depending on what happened. On a throw; if ALL runners advance on the play, the balk is ignored. If not, the balk award is enforced from the time of pitch. On a pitch; if ALL runners INCLUDING the batter, advance on the play, the balk is ignored. Otherwise, it is no-pitch and the balk award is made from the time of the pitch.



FAIR FEET, FAIR BALL RULE MYTH

The position of the player's feet or any other part of the body is irrelevant. A ball is judged fair or foul based on the relationship between the ball and the ground at the time the ball is touched by the fielder.



Rule: 2.00 FAIR, FOUL Official Baseball Rules







APPEAL RULE MYTH

An appeal may be made anytime the ball is alive. The only time the ball must go to the pitcher, is when time is out. The ball cannot be made live until the pitcher has the ball while on the rubber and the umpire says "Play." If time is not out, the appeal can be made immediately.



Rule: 2.00 APPEAL, 5.11, 7.10 Official Baseball Rules





FALSE WINDUP RULE MYTH

A pitch is a ball delivered to the batter by the pitcher. If the ball is not delivered, it is not a pitch. Therefore it cannot be a ball. If this happens with runners on base it is a balk. The rule for LL is different. It is an illegal pitch and a ball with or without runners on base.



Rule: 2.00 PITCH.





MUST SET TO PICK RULE MYTH

The pitcher is required to come to a complete stop in the Set position before delivering the pitch, not before making a throw.



Rule: 8.05(m) Official Baseball Rules





MUST STEP OFF RUBBER TO PICK RULE MYTH

If the pitcher steps off the rubber he is no longer the pitcher, he is a fielder. He can throw to a base from the rubber, provided he does not break any of the rules under rule 8.05



Official Baseball Rulesa





Rule: 8.05 PENALTY Official Baseball Rules

















FIELDER OVER THE FENCE HOMERUN RULE MYTH

As long as the fielder is not touching the ground in dead ball territory when he catches the ball, it is a legal catch if he holds onto the ball and meets the definition of a catch. If the catch is not the third out and the fielder falls down in dead ball territory after catching the ball, all runners are awarded one base. If the fielder remains on his feet in dead ball territory after the catch, the ball is alive and he may make a play. (Except FED in which case the ball is dead and 1 base is awarded.)



Rules: 2.00 CATCH, 5.10(f), 6.05(a), 7.04(c) Official Baseball Rules





DEAD BALL WHEN UMPIRE IS HIT RULE MYTH

If an umpire is hit by a batted ball before it passes a fielder, the ball is dead. On any other batted or thrown ball, the ball is alive when the umpire is hit with the ball. Umpire interference also occurs when the plate umpire interferes with the catcher's attempt to prevent a stolen base.



Rules: 2.00 INTERFERENCE, 5.09(b), 5.09(f) Official Baseball Rules





HOME PLATE UMPIRE RULE MYTH

The umpire who made a call or ruling may ask for help if he wishes. No umpire may overrule another umpire's call.



Rules: 9.02(b, c) Official Baseball Rules

Cricket Rules

The game of Cricket is played on a large, oval-shaped field. The equipment used consists of a bat, ball, and gloves. Two teams, each consisting of a maximum of 11 players, compete in one or two innings depending on the time and agreement of the team. An inning will be defined as both batting and fielding for each team. One team goes in to bat and the other team fields. Two batsmen take the field at one time, one man at each wicket, which are 23 yards apart, and alternate batting.

During an inning, 6 balls will be bowled to one wicket, and then the fielding team will bowl six balls to the other wicket. No bowler may bowl two consecutive overs. The fielding team may change bowlers at the end of overs.
A batting team may voluntarily end their batting inning at the end of any over. Either team may request that a game be suspended for light or weather or other special circumstances. The request will be considered by the umpire or decided by Rock-Scissors-Paper Democracy. The team with the most runs at the end wins. An umpire makes the decisions during the course of the game. If an umpire is not available, decisions once again will be made by using Rock-Scissors-Paper democracy.









Four ways a batman can score runs:

1.By hitting the ball within the field and running from one crease to the other counts for one run.
2.By hitting the ball out of the field. if the ball does not bounce while going out the batsman scores six runs and if it does bounce he/she scores four runs. Any runs scored by running between the wickets before the ball crossing the boundary will also count.
3.If the bowler bowls a ball too high or too wide to be fairly played by the batsman (1 run).
4.If the bowler does not bowl the ball with a straight arm (1 run).

The goal of the fieldsmen is to get the batsmen 'out'. There are six ways a batsman can be out:

1. If the fielder catches the ball is deemed out.

2.When the bowler hits the 'bails' of the top of the wicket (Bowled Out).
3. When the batsman runs from one crease to another, a fielder hits the 'bails' of either wicket when the batsman is heading towards the hit wicket is not in the crease (Stumped).
4. If the batsman gets hit by a ball on his body which is inline with the wickets height and length, and the ball did not bounce in a line behind the batsman's stance. Leg Before Wicket).
5. If the batsman knocks the bails off of his/her own wicket with bat or body.
6. If either batsman interferes with a fielder catching a batted ball.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Ipl Auction

Panaji: Eight Indian Premier League franchisees, with a total budget of $13.59 million, will buy 17 players from a pool of 50 in the second edition of the players' auction here on Friday.


Hello and welcome to our coverage of the IPL season II auction from Goa. It promises to be one action-packed day. The teams and the players will both have their fingers crossed.


In Friday's auction, there are 18 players from Australia, seven from England, five from Sri Lanka, three from New Zealand, seven from South Africa, six from West Indies and four from Bangladesh would be up for grabs.

Round 1


Rajasthan Royals buy Australian bowler Shaun Tait for $375,000.


Mumbai Indians bid $950,000 for South African batsman Jean-Paul Duminy.


Chennai Super Kings bid a record price of $1.55 million for England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff.


And the Bangalore Royal Challengers bid $1.55 million for former England captain Kevin Pietersen.


Pietersen and Flintoff have now become the costliest players in the IPL. The previous highest bid was for Chennai Super Kings captain MS Dhoni, who had been bid last year for $1.5 million.



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Round 2


Deccan Chargers buy West Indies bowler Fidel Edwards for $ 150,000.


Delhi Daredevils buy England batsman Owais Shah for $275,000.


Delhi Daredevils buy former England ODI captain Paul Collingwood for $275,000.


At the end of this round no takers for: Brad Haddin, Stuart Clark, Chamara Kapugedera.



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Round 3


Rajasthan Royals buy South African all-rounder Tyron Henderson for $650,000.


King's XI, Punjab buy England all-rounder Ravi Bopara for $450,000.


Chennai Super Kings bid $140,000 for Sri Lankan bowler Thilan Thusara.


Bangalore Royal Challengers buy New Zealand batsman Jesse Ryder for $160,000.


Mumbai Indians buy New Zealand bowler Kyle Mills for $150,000.


At the end of this round no takers for: Phil Jaques, Ashwell Prince, Andre Nel, Luke Wright, Nuwan Kulasekara.



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Round 4


Deccan Chargers buy West Indies all-rounder Dwayne Smith for $100,000.


At the end of this round no takers for: Samit Patel, Shakib-Al-Hasan, Morne Wan Vyk, Jerome Taylor, Steven Smith, Ashley Noffke, Mohammad Ashraful and Darren Powell.




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Round 5


All players in this pool were unsold.


The list includes: Tamim Iqbal, Bryce McCain, James Franklin, Adrian Blizard, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Michael Klinger, S Weeraratne, Prasanna Jayawardene, Dominic Thornely.




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Round 6


Kolkata Knight Riders bid $600,000 for Bangladesh bowler Mashrafe Mortaza.


Chennai Super Kings buy Australia's George Bailey for $50,000.


At the end of this round no takers for: Yusuf Abdullah, Daniel Harris, Kemar Roach, Aaron Bird.




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At the end of the six rounds of bidding, only two teams Mumbai Indians and Kings XI Punjab had a slot each for an overseas player. Each team can have a maximum of ten foreign players.


The two teams were asked to submit the names of two or three players, whom they wish to buy so that they can be put up for sale again.


Kings XI Punjab asked for West Indies bowler Jerome Taylor and will get him at his base price of $150,000, while Mumbai Indians get Bangladesh skipper Mohammad Ashraful for $75,000.


And that is the end of the IPL auction for the second season. Now, the action beckons!

Ipl History

What is the Indian Premier League?

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) launched the Indian Premier League (IPL) on September 14, 2007. Based on the lines of the English Premier League (EPL) and the National Basketball League (NBA), the IPL is said to be the brainchild of BCCI vice-president Lalit Modi. The idea was first floated in 1996 but was shot down as the board felt it would go against the zonal system of domestic cricket. The project moved into top gear when the Zee group launched a rival Indian Cricket League on similar lines in April 2007.

Who are the franchisees?

The franchisees will own the eight teams in the fray. They can run them in their own styles, bring their own sponsors and even name the team according to their choice. They will even be free to list their teams on the stock exchange.

How is it different from the football and hockey leagues in India?

The IPL, in a way, is not very different in its format vis-a-vis the PHL or the I-League in football. It is, however, totally different in its concept as the teams have been offered to franchisees (individuals or corporates) through a bidding process that culminated on Thursday. The BCCI has already signed up 80 international players who will also be put for auction soon.

When will the IPL matches be played and where?

Under lights, on a home and away basis, in the cities that have formed the teams. The league opens on April 18 and will see 59 matches spread over 44 days

What kind of money is involved in IPL?

The overall prize money will be US $5 million, with the winners taking home $2 million. The remaining will be up for grabs in different forms, like man of the match awards and cash prizes. By contrast, the winners of the 2007 ICC World Cup in the Caribbean took home $1 million; the Indian team that won the World Twenty20 got half of that. TV rights have already gone for over $1 billion. Franchisees have already committed close to US $723 million. Top players are expected to earn minimum 1-2 crores per season.

What is already in place for IPL?

With the league scheduled for April 2008, the IPL has so far sold the eight teams to corporate houses and signed leading players. Indian stars like Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly will be called “icon players” and can play only for their respective cities. They will be the highest paid players and will not be auctioned. The bidding will take place next month.

Who owns the IPL TV rights?

Sony Entertainment, a division of Japan’s Sony Corp, and the Asia-based World Sports Group (WSG) won the broadcast rights for ten years, worth more than a whopping US $1 billion. TV rights are worth $918 million, with $100 million set aside for promotion.

Who will run the IPL?

BCCI has formed an IPL council that comprises former BCCI president IS Bindra, vice-presidents Rajiv Shukla, Chirayu Amin, Lalit Modi and Arun Jaitley, and former cricketers Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shastri. While the BCCI officials are honorary members, Pataudi, Gavaskar and Shastri will be paid for their services. The IPL governing council will have a five-year term and will run, operate and manage the league independently of the BCCI.