Howard bowled out in ICC role bid

SINGAPORE, (Reuters) – Former Australia Prime  Minister John Howard has failed in his bid to become the next  vice-president of the International Cricket Council (ICC).

The 70-year-old Howard had been nominated for the position  by Cricket Australia (CA) and New Zealand Cricket (NZC), who  have been asked to put forward another candidate by the ICC.

The decision was made yesterday at the week-long ICC  executive board meeting in Singapore.
“Following lengthy consideration it was recognised that the  nomination put forward by Cricket Australia and New Zealand  Cricket did not have sufficient support within the ICC Board.  No vote was taken,” the sport’s governing body said in a  statement.

“Under the ICC’s regional rotation process… Cricket  Australia and New Zealand Cricket were invited to re-nominate a  candidate by August 31, 2010.”

Under ICC rules, the vice-president would serve for two  years then become president in 2012.

CA and NZC issued a joint statement after the announcement  expressing their disappointment at the decision.

“We jointly nominated Mr Howard as a candidate as he  possesses significant leadership and administrative skills,” CA  chairman Jack Clarke and NZC chairman Alan Isaac said in the  statement.

“We believe cricket needs to continue to seek excellence  and dispassionate independence in the game’s global governance.

“We remain convinced it is reasonable for his nomination to  be supported by the ICC Executive Board and we are deeply  disappointed by the position taken at today’s meeting.”

CONTENTIOUS CHOICE

The nomination of Howard, who lost the 2007 Australian  federal election and retired from politics, had been  contentious with earlier newspaper reports indicating that six  of the 10 major cricket nations at the Singapore meeting had  signed a letter opposing him as a candidate.

Only Australia, New Zealand and England had supported him,  the Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian reported on their  websites.

In the weeks leading up to the Singapore gathering, the  Australian media suggested Howard would struggle to seal the  nomination.

One of the reasons given was his criticism of Zimbabwe  President Robert Mugabe’s regime when he was Australian Prime  Minister, with both South Africa and Zimbabwe expected not to  give him support.

Sri Lanka cricket authorities had also expressed  reservations about his nomination because he did not have the  necessary cricketing administrative background.

He also won few friends in Sri Lanka after he questioned  the bowling action of test wicket record holder Muttiah  Muralitharan.

Howard was also the subject of a public battle between CA  and NZC for the nomination, with New Zealand wanting to  nominate their former chairman John Anderson for the position  before they agreed to Howard.