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Just as you think things can't get worse in the West Indies, something happens to prove you wrong
May 2, 2007
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Yesterday's comments by Bruce Aanensen, the WICB's recently-installed chief executive, regarding player contracts for the forthcoming tour of England were about as inflammatory as anything that has gone before. In fairly blunt terms, he effectively sent a message to the team to shut up and do as they were told. It was the rhetoric of a pre-union boss to his disgruntled employees.
Aanensen, who has been in the job for less than a week, has a background steeped in the game. He has also wasted no time in adopting the all-too-familiar confrontational attitude of his new colleagues.
His comments yesterday were not off-the-cuff asides. They followed a board meeting on Sunday and were clearly thought out, and timed to not only fire a warning shot across the players' bows but also to try to seriously undermine their position in the eyes of the fans.
The board clearly feels that after a dismal World Cup the team are weak, and after having its nose bloodied in recent exchanges, it is out for revenge.
The problem is that, yet again, the story it tells doesn't add up. While Aanensen hints that the contractual issues are non negotiable, he fails to mention that for months the board agreed with WIPA, the players' association, that the tour needed a separate contract, only to go back on its word at last minute.
Tony Deyal, the board's corporate secretary, admitted that it had taken that stand - and there are several emails and board minutes to that effect - but that, with hindsight, it was wrong. So why did the board not raise that problem between January and April? And why did Ken Gordon, the board president, ignore a raft of emails from WIPA through early April asking for an urgent meeting.
Aanensen's statement actually clears that up. He states: "All the documents have been submitted to [the arbitrator]. He says he needs time to study them and that he doesn't believe there is any way that they can have this arbitration prior to the team leaving on the eighth."
In other words, he is giving the impression that the WICB is doing all it can to speed up the process. The reality seems to be that it is doing quite the opposite.
As at yesterday, ten days after the two sides agreed to arbitration, WIPA claimed Sir David Simmons, the arbitrator, had not received any documentation or submissions from the WICB and that Simmons has indicated that as soon as the papers are filed, a decision will follow very quickly. The WICB maintain that Terms of Reference had to be agreed before documentation could be forwarded.
But when you take into consideration the WICB's reluctance to address the matter over the last two months, it leaves a strong suspicion that the board is deliberately spoiling for a fight.
But why? The reason seems to be that the players, who have been appallingly treated for generations by their own board, have recently started to stand their ground, and what's more they dealt some embarrassing blows to the WICB.
The board also thinks that its policy has backed the players into a corner. Either they go and do as they are told, or they refuse and look like money-grabbing mercenaries.
All this has blown up because of the confusion over the exact terms used in the Memorandum of Understanding between the WICB and WIPA. When the dust settles on this row the MOU needs to be made watertight with both sides agreeing to every dotted i and crossed t.
As it stands, the spirit of the agreement is fairly clear, but, as generations of West Indies players have learned, the board is not too enamoured with anything as intangible as that. They have spotted a loophole and are likely to try to drive a coach and horses through it.
Executive editor Martin Williamson joined the Wisden website in its planning stages in 2001 after failing to make his millions in the internet boom when managing editor of Sportal. Before that he was in charge of Sky Sports Online and helped launch and run Sky News Online. With a preference for all things old (except his wife and children), he has recently confounded colleagues by displaying an uncharacteristic fondness for Twenty20 cricket. His enthusiasm for the game is sadly not matched by his ability, but he remains convinced that he might be a late developer and perseveres in the hope of an England call-up with his middle-order batting and non-spinning offbreaks. He is now managing editor of ESPN EMEA Digital Group as well as his Cricinfo responsibilities.

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