<p>Lambasting the Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) for deciding to install a statue of its late former president Arun Jaitley at the Feroz Shah Kotla ground, spin legend Bishan Singh Bedi has asked the body to remove his name from the spectators' stand, which was named after him in 2017.</p>.<p>Lashing out at the DDCA's culture, which he alleged promotes nepotism and puts "administrators ahead of cricketers", Bedi also renounced his membership of the body.</p>.<p>He made the demand in a scathing letter addressed to DDCA President Rohan Jaitley, the son of the late politician, who was a minister in the BJP-led NDA government and died last year owing to multiple health issues.</p>.<p>"I pride myself as a man of immense tolerance and patience...but all that I'm afraid, is running out. DDCA has truly tested me and forced me to take this drastic action.</p>.<p>"So, Mr. President I request you to remove my name from the stand named after me with immediate effect. Also, I hereby renounce my DDCA membership," Bedi wrote in his letter.</p>.<p>Jaitley was DDCA president for 14 years, from 1999 to 2013, before quitting cricket administration. The body plans to have a six-foot statue of him installed at the Kotla to honour his memory.</p>.<p>The DDCA had named one of the stands after Bedi in November 2017 along with Mohinder Amarnath.</p>.<p>"I've taken this decision with sufficient deliberations. I'm not prone to disregard the honour that was bestowed upon me. But as we all know with honour comes responsibility. They feted me for the total respect and integrity with which I played the game.</p>.<p>"And now I'm returning the honour just to assure them all that four decades after my retirement, I still retain those values."</p>.<p>Putting his decision in context, Bedi wrote that he was never a fan of Arun Jaitley's working style and always opposed any decision that he did not agree with.</p>.<p>"My reservations about the choice of people he hand-picked to run the day-to-day affairs of DDCA is well known. I remember walking out from a meeting at his residence whence he was unable to throw out a rowdy element using terribly foul language.</p>.<p>"I think I was too head strong..too old school..and too proud an Indian cricketer to be co-opted into the corrupt darbar of sycophants Arun Jaitley mustered at the Kotla during his stewardship," Bedi wrote.</p>.<p>Bedi said it pained him that even the current leadership follows the culture of "fawning obeisance".</p>.<p>"After the Feroze Shah Kotla was named hurriedly and most undeservingly after the late Arun Jaitley, my reaction then was maybe somehow good sense might prevail to keep the Kotla sacrosanct.</p>.<p>"How wrong I was. Now I gather a statue of the late Arun Jaitley is going to be installed at the Kotla. I'm not at all enamoured with the thought of a statue of Arun Jaitley coming up at the Kotla."</p>.<p>Bedi said that since the late administrator was primarily a politician, it's the Parliament that needs to "remember him for posterity".</p>.<p>"This is not a rhetorical assessment but a factual appraisal of his time at the DDCA. Take my word, failures don't need to be celebrated with plaques and busts. They need to be forgotten."</p>.<p>Citing examples of how great cricketers were honoured in in other countries, Bedi said, "People who surround you presently will never inform you that it's WG Grace at Lord's...Sir Jack Hobbs at the Oval...Sir Donald Bradman at the SCG...Sir Garfield Sobers at Barbados and Shane Warne of recent vintage at the MCG...who adorn their cricket stadia with the Spirit of Cricket never out of place.</p>.<p>"...Sporting arenas need sporting role models. The place of the administrators is in their glass cabins.</p>.<p>"Since DDCA doesn't understand this universal cricket culture, I need to walk out of it. I can't be part of a stadium which has got its priorities so grossly wrong and where administrators get precedence over the cricketers. Please bring down my name from the stand with immediate effect."</p>
<p>Lambasting the Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) for deciding to install a statue of its late former president Arun Jaitley at the Feroz Shah Kotla ground, spin legend Bishan Singh Bedi has asked the body to remove his name from the spectators' stand, which was named after him in 2017.</p>.<p>Lashing out at the DDCA's culture, which he alleged promotes nepotism and puts "administrators ahead of cricketers", Bedi also renounced his membership of the body.</p>.<p>He made the demand in a scathing letter addressed to DDCA President Rohan Jaitley, the son of the late politician, who was a minister in the BJP-led NDA government and died last year owing to multiple health issues.</p>.<p>"I pride myself as a man of immense tolerance and patience...but all that I'm afraid, is running out. DDCA has truly tested me and forced me to take this drastic action.</p>.<p>"So, Mr. President I request you to remove my name from the stand named after me with immediate effect. Also, I hereby renounce my DDCA membership," Bedi wrote in his letter.</p>.<p>Jaitley was DDCA president for 14 years, from 1999 to 2013, before quitting cricket administration. The body plans to have a six-foot statue of him installed at the Kotla to honour his memory.</p>.<p>The DDCA had named one of the stands after Bedi in November 2017 along with Mohinder Amarnath.</p>.<p>"I've taken this decision with sufficient deliberations. I'm not prone to disregard the honour that was bestowed upon me. But as we all know with honour comes responsibility. They feted me for the total respect and integrity with which I played the game.</p>.<p>"And now I'm returning the honour just to assure them all that four decades after my retirement, I still retain those values."</p>.<p>Putting his decision in context, Bedi wrote that he was never a fan of Arun Jaitley's working style and always opposed any decision that he did not agree with.</p>.<p>"My reservations about the choice of people he hand-picked to run the day-to-day affairs of DDCA is well known. I remember walking out from a meeting at his residence whence he was unable to throw out a rowdy element using terribly foul language.</p>.<p>"I think I was too head strong..too old school..and too proud an Indian cricketer to be co-opted into the corrupt darbar of sycophants Arun Jaitley mustered at the Kotla during his stewardship," Bedi wrote.</p>.<p>Bedi said it pained him that even the current leadership follows the culture of "fawning obeisance".</p>.<p>"After the Feroze Shah Kotla was named hurriedly and most undeservingly after the late Arun Jaitley, my reaction then was maybe somehow good sense might prevail to keep the Kotla sacrosanct.</p>.<p>"How wrong I was. Now I gather a statue of the late Arun Jaitley is going to be installed at the Kotla. I'm not at all enamoured with the thought of a statue of Arun Jaitley coming up at the Kotla."</p>.<p>Bedi said that since the late administrator was primarily a politician, it's the Parliament that needs to "remember him for posterity".</p>.<p>"This is not a rhetorical assessment but a factual appraisal of his time at the DDCA. Take my word, failures don't need to be celebrated with plaques and busts. They need to be forgotten."</p>.<p>Citing examples of how great cricketers were honoured in in other countries, Bedi said, "People who surround you presently will never inform you that it's WG Grace at Lord's...Sir Jack Hobbs at the Oval...Sir Donald Bradman at the SCG...Sir Garfield Sobers at Barbados and Shane Warne of recent vintage at the MCG...who adorn their cricket stadia with the Spirit of Cricket never out of place.</p>.<p>"...Sporting arenas need sporting role models. The place of the administrators is in their glass cabins.</p>.<p>"Since DDCA doesn't understand this universal cricket culture, I need to walk out of it. I can't be part of a stadium which has got its priorities so grossly wrong and where administrators get precedence over the cricketers. Please bring down my name from the stand with immediate effect."</p>