
Whether N Srinivasan can return as president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India or BCCI will dominate a meeting expected to be held soon in New Delhi. Mr Srinivasan was forced to step aside in June after his son-in-law was arrested on charges of spot-fixing in this year's domestic Indian Premiere League or IPL.
Here are 10 big developments in this story:
This week, an internal investigation conducted by the BCCI cleared two teams - the Chennai Super Kings and the Rajasthan Royals - of involvement in spot-fixing.
The BCCI's panel of two former judges said there was no evidence of fixing by Mr Srinivasan's son-in-law, Gurunath Meiyappan. Mr Srinivasan's firm, India Cements, owns the Chennai Super Kings.
The report paved the way for Mr Srinivasan to resume office as chief of the world's richest cricket body. Former president Jagmohan Dalimya has been filling in for him. But the Bombay High Court then ruled that the BCCI's investigation was invalid, partly because the panel had been set up to probe charges against Gurunath Meiyappan, when his father-in-law N Srinivasan was in charge as BCCI chief.
The High Court's verdict was based on a petition filed by the Bihar Cricket Association.
The IPL Governing council discuss whether it should challenge the High Court's verdict in the Supreme Court.
Mr Srinivasan will attend today's meeting of the working committee as the representative of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Association. But BCCI's Secretary Sanjay Patel has controversially said that Mr Srinivasan will chair the meeting because the internal inquiry has cleared his family and team of fixing charges.
But not everyone in the BCCI is on board. Sources say eight members of the working committee will suggest that given the court verdict, it is not appropriate for Mr Srinivasan to return as president just yet.
The spot-fixing controversy arose after the arrest in May of Rajasthan Royals players Shantakumaran Sreesanth, Ajit Chandila and Ankeet Chavan by the Delhi Police, who claimed they had proof that the players had conceded more than a specified number of runs per over in return for money from illegal bookmakers.
The three players were charged with cheating, criminal conspiracy and criminal breach of trust while a fourth player, Sidharth Trivedi, was also questioned by police. Sreesanth and Chavan are out on bail, while Chandila is in jail awaiting trial.
Rajasthan Royals co-owner Raj Kundra confessed to betting and was not arrested. The BCCI's inquiry has found no evidence to suggest he was involved with fixing. Mr Kundra is married to Bollywood actor Shilpa Shetty.