Close to midnight on October 13, as over 50 cricket officials, gathered from the state association across the country, waited anxiously in the Sunset Hall of Trident hotel in Mumbai, former cricket supremo N. Srinivasan announced the “unanimously” chosen candidates for the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) elections. A compromise had just come about after many days of intense lobbying, in which India’s who’s who, including home minister Amit Shah, was closely involved.