NEW DELHI – Indian cricket authorities have terminated Indian Premier League side the Deccan Chargers for failing to comply with a deadline for overdue player fees, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said Saturday. The decision, the BCCI said in a statement, was “only due to the absolute inability of the franchise to effectively run the team”. The BCCI added due to the “stated position of the Deccan franchise to refuse to rectify the various defaults including payments to players... a decision was taken to forthwith terminate the Deccan Chargers franchise”. Since May the board said it had “received repeated assurances that the overdue player fees would be paid; all of these promises have been unfulfilled”. The future of the 2009 IPL champions, who were skippered by Sri Lankan captain Kumar Sangakkara, looked like being preserved when they were put up for sale last week by cash-strapped Deccan Chronicle Holdings, who had paid $107 million to have the franchise for 10 years in 2008. Interest had been lodged in buying the side but the BCCI said that Deccan Chronicle Holdings had rejected a bid of 4.5 billion Indian rupees ($82.70 million) and an equal sum in convertible debentures. This coupled with a letter from the franchise owners' lawyers saying they had done nothing wrong led to the BCCI to shut down the team, which also featured South African quick Dale Steyn, Australian batsman Cameron White and Indian bowler Ishant Sharma. “BCCI received a lawyers notice invoking arbitration from the franchise stating that it had not committed any breaches and even if such breaches were committed, the BCCI should not act to terminate the franchise till Yes Bank Ltd furnishes sufficient finance to cure the breaches,” the BCCI said. “By this, Deccan Chronicle Holdings Ltd has clearly admitted its inability to cure its breaches within the time stipulated in the BCCI notice despite every bit of assistance from the BCCI. Deccan is not the first side to be thrown out of the lucrative IPL. Last year, the board terminated the contract of the Kochi franchise for payment default. — Agencies