West Indies cricket reform: Specialist coaches, coordination with franchises part of exhaustive plan
The committee, which included Brian Lara and Clive Lloyd, has identified the major challenges facing West Indies cricket and plotted short- and long-term actions for overall improvement
"Our commitment to cricket development across the region is unwavering," Miles Bascombe said • Associated Press
- Declining quality of regional tournaments
- Technical, tactical, and mental skills deficiencies
- Underperforming franchise system
- Gaps in infrastructure and facilities
- Lack of specialist coaching support
- Limited ICC revenue share and financial constraints
- Fragmented player development pathways
- Inadequate fitness and conditioning standards
- A national cricket development framework unifying grassroots, school, academy, and high-performance pathways
- Comprehensive franchise reform to ensure accountability for player development and consideration of alternative professional models
- Establishment of standardised academies for ages 11-18 to feed into the high-performance programme
- Completion of the high-performance centre in Antigua as the regional hub for elite development
- Greater focus on financial sustainability, including lobbying for equitable ICC revenue distribution and new partnerships with governments, private entities, and philanthropists
- A structured mentorship framework connecting current and former West Indies players with emerging talent
