London: Tim Wright, former chief executive of IPL team Deccan Chargers, has been awarded 10,533,478 pounds sterling, plus legal costs, after winning his case in the Royal Courts of Justice against breach of his employment contract.
Wright had joined Deccan Chargers management after the first season of the IPL but was dismissed in January 2009.
He began legal proceedings against its parent company, Deccan Chronicle Holdings, in February 2009.

Tim Wright had joined Deccan Chargers management after the first season of the IPL but was dismissed in Jan. 2009.
During the hearing, Wright had argued that the franchise had breached his contract, which contained a severance clause of 10 million pounds.
Deccan Charges had challenged the jurisdiction of the English courts, but the court decided in Wright's favour.
In his ruling delivered on Monday, Judge Seymour ordered Deccan Chargers and Deccan Chronicle Holdings to pay Wright 10,533,478 pounds due under his contract.
The judge also ordered Chargers and Deccan Chronicle Holdings to pay Wright's legal costs on an indemnity basis.
Chargers had accused Wright of absconding and had claimed he was "avoiding India for fear of being questioned by immigration officials/local police".
Wright rejected the allegations, calling them "without any foundation whatsoever".
(For updates you can share with your friends, follow IBNLive on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest)













IPL 6 play-offs: Final week of action beckons
Team owners are biggest victims of spot-fixing: Preity Zinta
Blame guilty, not IPL for spot-fixing: Murali Kartik
Spot-fixing: Baburao's family claims he is innocent
Spot-fixing probe deals a blow to tainted players
Spot-fixing: Rajasthan Royals suspend tainted trio
'BCCI to write to govt asking for a law against fixing'
Heavyweights Mumbai and CSK clash in fight for the final




