Make no mistake about it, there has always been politics in Indian cricket. A phenomenon which has the capacity to induce global rapture, to engage innumerable societies and to intoxicate or enrage countless communities of the country will always have its factional politics. As far back as 1951, commenting on that year’s BCCI presidential elections, The Times of India had declared: "De Mello’s adherents, however, had reckoned without that incorrigible paan-chewing diplomat Pankaj Gupta, who, with his customary thoroughness and resource had utilised the appallingly few days since his return from England to such excellent purpose that on the morning of the AGM the Bengal clique was assured of a majority." On this occasion, through ruse and manoeuvre, J.C. Mukherjee, Gupta’s candidate, scraped through with the thinnest of majorities, 12-11. However, such drama has, so far, always managed to distance itself from the curse of party politics.