IE Highlights

Search
Indian Express
Web
Advanced Search
Search Archives

Advertisments

Matrimonials Register FREE on Naukri.com. Get cash upto Rs 10 Lakhs No minimum balance NRI account Rs.250 cashback for credit cards* Buy Original Microsoft Software Book International flights & get 10000 Money Back

Send Flowers

Find Love, Romance & friends

Live Cricket

Sports

Not a cricketer if played with tennis ball: HC

Agencies

Posted online: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 at 1508 hrs Print Email


Ahmedabad, May 6: : Gujarat High Court rejected a petition filed by a man seeking benefits of being a sportsperson as he had played National Level Tennis Ball Cricket Championship.

High Court Justice Bhagwati Prasad said, "Cricket with tennis ball is not cricket, and playing cricket with a tennis ball would not make you a sportsperson. So playing tennis ball cricket will not fetch you a job."

The Court had given the order last week on a petition filed by one Jignesh Patel, who had contended that since he played tennis ball cricket, he was eligible for benefit of additional five per cent marks given to sportspersons when he applied for the job of physical training teacher in primary school.

Patel had moved the Court last year after the education department officials of Banaskantha, where he had appiled for the post of primary teacher, denied him the benifit of a sportsperson, saying that he was not a cricketer.

The education officials, citing a government resolution, claimed that there was no specification about tennis ball cricket and hence he cannot be given benefit of a

sportsperson.

Patel, who hails from Sabarkantha district has completed Certificate in Physical Education (CPEd) and had applied for the post of primary teacher in 2007.

The court had observed that if the tennis ball game is termed as cricket, people playing cricket in the streets would also become entitled to get sportsperson benefits.

"Cricket in common parlance does not include a tennis ball, which is an abrasion of the original cricket game. If marks have not been awarded for participation to the petitioner, then no illegality is seen because every form of ball and bat game cannot be called cricket", the court said.

Tennis ball cricket is a children's game and not a game as such recognised by the government, the court observed.

Ads By Google

Post CommentView CommentsWrite to Editor

All Headlines All Front Page News
Your comment[s] on this article


Be the first to comment on this story.

Total comment[s]:0 | Read comment[s]| Post your comment

 
Full Coverage

The CM WritesTaking on NaxalsBenazir's AssassinationThird EyeMandate 2007

Most Read Articles

Govt chases ‘cartels’ but the watchdog has no teethAdvani, RSS sit for a Parivar dinnerAll it takes to get a visaMumbai learn home truthPostcard from a new century

Most Emailed Articles

Tobacco warnings get ‘milder’: scorpion, lungsBJP to take up Bush comment on food crisis in House today‘India will never have a revolution. China will need one every two-three centuries, their society is hierarchical, has one call centre. India is diverse’New guidelines on FDI in wholesale trading soonBJP as an open book