Patil, who coached Kenya into the 2003 World Cup semi-finals and was coach of India A, believes that “he has accepted the job purely from a coach’s perspective and nothing else. I am ready to help any team that needs my services as a coach. It could be Kenya or Oman again, or any other state side. So ICL shouldn’t be looked upon as anything different.
“I am not getting into this fight between the board and ICL. My job is to coach, irrespective of who wants me. And by the way, I am only doing a service to the board by coaching the boys. I am not training them to fight BCCI. So where is the question of conflict of interests?” he asks.
Patil also confirmed he hasn’t heared officially from the board on its plans to stop his pension. “I am yet to hear from them in writing. I have only come to know from news reports. But it is purely BCCI’s decision. I did not go to it asking for pension. The board gave it for my services as a player and now if it wishes to stop pension, then let it be so. But for me, there’s no going back on my contract with ICL.”
“I have made a commitment to ICL and, as a professional coach, I will honour that,” was his parting shot.