Mumbai: The Board for Control of Cricket in India (BCCI) secretary Jay Shah revealed that the decision of removing wicketkeeper-batter Ishan Kishan and batter Shreyas Iyer from the recently announced latest central contracted players list was was solely taken by chairman of selectors Ajit Agarkar.
As a result, Kishan and Iyer were left out after failing to show up for domestic teams despite a directive from the BCCI. Both reportedly made excuses to miss the five-match Test series against England stating mental fatigue and back spasm respectively. While Kishan went on a long break after the end of the ICC ODI World Cup last year and remained unavailable until the ongoing Indian Premier League, Iyer eventually did feature in a few matches for domestic giants Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy including the semifinal and the final.
However, Iyer still found himself at the receiving end as the reports of him being attending Kolkata Knight Riders' (KKR) camp in Mumbai when his domestic side was busy playing a Ranji Trophy fixture surfaced.
"You can check the constitution. I am just a convener (of the selection meeting)," Shah said during a select media interaction at the BCCI head office here on Thursday.
"That decision lies with Ajit Agarkar, even when these two players (Ishan Kishan and Shreyas Iyer) who did not play domestic (cricket), the decision to drop them (from the central contracts list) was only his. My role is just to implement. And we have got new players (in place), like Sanju (Samson). Nobody is indispensable," he added.
Shah reiterated the Board's position that Indian players will have to prioritise domestic cricket. He had stated before the India-England third Test a couple of months back that he backs the chief selector's decision for strong action on players who do not comply with the Indian captain and team management's requirement for participation in domestic cricket.
During the fifth Test, BCCI had even released a new payment structure for the domestic and Indian players where majorly focus was on the domestic games.