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Tony Cozier

WICB: all talk, little action

The board has spoken about positive breakthroughs in its BCCI and Simmons controversies but nothing concrete has materialised on either front

Tony Cozier
Tony Cozier
01-Nov-2015
Dave Cameron and Michael Muirhead have spoken of resolving their conflicts with the BCCI but the Indian board has not confirmed a resolution  •  WICB Media/Brooks LaTouche Photography Ltd

Dave Cameron and Michael Muirhead have spoken of resolving their conflicts with the BCCI but the Indian board has not confirmed a resolution  •  WICB Media/Brooks LaTouche Photography Ltd

Nothing is as it seems in West Indies cricket.
Of late, the gap has widened between the public statements of WICB president Dave Cameron, chief executive officer Michael Muirhead, and reality.
Separate reports on its governance by committees headed by former Jamaican prime minister PJ Patterson, and Charles Wilkin, a St Kitts Queen's Counsel, stressed the importance of accountability from the board. The public, and even directors of the WICB, have been left in the dark on major issues. They need to be told the truth by those who lead the administration of the regional game.
Two issues now occupy Cameron's attention. One continues to concern the WICB's relationship with the BCCI over the withdrawal of the team from its scheduled tour of India 13 months ago. The suspension of head coach Phil Simmons on the eve of the current tour of Sri Lanka for his comments over selection, specifically over the continuing exclusion of Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard from the ODI squad, is the other.
Two weeks ago Cameron revealed exclusively to the Nation newspaper of Barbados, by telephone from Mumbai, that he and Muirhead held "cordial and fruitful discussions" for nearly two hours with BCCI president Shashank Manohar and secretary Anurag Thakur at the BCCI office. Inevitably, the subject was the fallout from what the BCCI described at the time as the "unilateral cancellation of the tour by the WICB" last October. According to the newspaper report, Cameron "confirmed" that India would "almost certainly" tour the Caribbean in 2016 for four Tests. They would return in 2017 for five ODIs, since "split tours are likely to be more beneficial financially to the board than a single, full tour".
This was such a potentially vital breakthrough in the prolonged impasse between the two boards that official confirmation was surely required from both. None was forthcoming. Without it, no media outlet, in the Caribbean or India, followed up on the report.
In the meantime, the ICC's Future Tours Programme (FTP) was suddenly adjusted to show that India would indeed tour the Caribbean for four Tests in July-August 2016 and five ODIs and one T20 the following July, just as Cameron said they would.
With such a catalogue of confusion, it is little wonder that there is widespread mistrust of the leadership of the WICB from prime ministers, players and public
Previously, it had listed India for three Tests, five ODIs and one T20 in February-March 2016, a series that was scuppered after the BCCI's working committee decided to suspend all bilateral relations between the two until the US$42 million compensation was settled. It still hasn't been.
The FTP's alteration appeared to lend credibility to Cameron's prediction; in fact, it added to the confusion after the Trinidad Guardian reported that the BCCI was not scheduled to deal with the impasse until its annual general meeting on November 9.
The Nation quoted "a source close to the board", stating it was still hoping to negotiate a deal with the BCCI to have its compensation claim from 2015 settled. The proposal was for West Indies to return to India for the cancelled matches as part payment.
Without IPL superstars like Chris Gayle, Bravo and Pollard and a few more, and given the team's No. 8 position on the ICC Test rankings, it is hardly a profitable alternative. As it is, Sri Lanka Cricket estimates it will make a loss of around $4.5 million on the ongoing West Indies tour of two Tests, five ODIs and two T20s.
According to an upbeat update from Muirhead last June, discussions with the BCCI on the issue "have been going very well". He looked forward "to have a resolution finalised and documented" after informal meetings between the two during the ICC's annual conference in Barbados later in the month. Instead, BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur said there had been no progress. Undeterred, Muirhead told the Jamaica-based SportsMax TV in August that the BCCI had "assured" the WICB that it would not have to pay its claim for compensation. There has been no verification from the BCCI.
The question was obvious. Was Muirhead's confidence for real or just wishful thinking?
The Simmons case is equally baffling. The WICB's management suspended him on September 28, two days after his critical, controversial comments.
"Integrity and professionalism are high on our agenda and we will not compromise on that," Muirhead said in a rare official statement the following day. He was adamant that Simmons had not been fired but rather summoned to answer "breaches of confidentiality and bringing the game into disrepute".
"He will be given a fair hearing by a panel and a decision within the bounds of our own human resources policy," Muirhead added. "The matter will be dealt with in a judicious manner and it is our intention to make a decision within the next seven working days." Over a month on and there has been no decision on Simmons' future. Eldine Baptiste, one of the three selectors who voted against the return of Bravo and Pollard, remains as interim coach in Sri Lanka.
Last Thursday, without providing details, Muirhead gave weight to rumours in the media that Simmons would be reinstated. There had been dialogue with Simmons, he said, and "we're moving to bring him back". The drawback was that Muirhead was waiting for Simmons' call. His expectation was that it would be by the next day.
The case had taken a sudden U-turn. Initially censured, Simmons was now calling the shots and hearing that he would soon have his job back. There is no mystery in guessing as to what Baptiste's reaction will be.
With such a catalogue of confusion, it is little wonder that there is widespread mistrust of the leadership of the WICB from prime ministers, players and public.
Darren Sammy, one-time Test and ODI captain, summed it up in the somewhat different circumstances of heavy defeats in Tests in India and New Zealand two years ago.
"We cannot continue like this," he said.

Tony Cozier has written about and commentated on cricket in the Caribbean for over 50 years