All-star Cup without the all Stars (27 July 1999)
The "International All-Star Cup" set down for San Francisco, New York and Toronto early next month edged closer to farce yesterday, with the tournament organisers forced to release a heavy watered-down list of participating players
27-Jul-1999
27 July 1999
All-star Cup without the all Stars
Rick Eyre, CricInfo365 Editor
The "International All-Star Cup" set down for San Francisco, New York
and Toronto early next month edged closer to farce yesterday, with the
tournament organisers forced to release a heavy watered-down list of
participating players.
Earlier this month PostMedia Group (PMG), a US-based media and
entertainment group run by and targeting expatriate Indians, announced
a three-match "Asia XI v The World XI" series of limited-over games to
be played in early August at San Francisco (3Com Stadium), New York
(Columbia Stadium), and Toronto (the Stardome). More than thirty
players were named originally, the Asian team including the best
players of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh and captained by
Mohammad Azharuddin, the World XI said to be captained by Steve Waugh
and including players from all remaining Test nations.
Despite claims by PMG that all players had agreed to take part, there
were some obvious committment clashes, especially with those involved
in county cricket and the England-New Zealand Test series. The series
was not sanctioned by the ICC - though it is not known at this stage
whether PMG had made an official approach to the ICC for their
support.
Over the past fortnight since the initial announcement, the
unavailability of many of the originally-listed players became
obvious. Apart from the obvious impossibility of the appearance of
England and New Zealand players, Pakistani players were removed from
the list - presumably for reasons associated with international
tensions between India and Pakistan over Kashmir.
Yesterday both the Australian Cricket Board and the United Cricket
Board of South Africa announced that none of their contracted players
would be released for the series. PMG, deprived of the Waugh twins,
Shane Warne and Adam Gilchrist by this decision, have responded by
naming three noncontracted Australians.
Former Australian off-spinner Gavin Robertson, retired Australian Test
captain Mark Taylor, and Paul Reiffel, who announced his retirement
from international cricket last week, are included in PMG's latest
team list for the "World XI". While Taylor no longer plays
representative cricket at any level, Robertson is under contract to
Cricket New South Wales, and Reiffel likewise to the Victorian Cricket
Association. Reiffel's sudden decision to retire from the
international game last week was based in part on his unwillingness to
embark on the Australian tour of Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe due to family
committments.
On top of these announcements comes the unsurprising revelation that
the BCCI has declined to release any of the current Indian national
team to take part in this series. The Indian players have a heavy
schedule ahead of them in official tournament play beginning in the
last week of August in Sri Lanka, followed by one-day series in
Singapore, Canada and Kenya in the following six weeks. In their
place PMG have named a number of exinternationals including retired
players such as Maninder Singh.
A number of leading West Indian players including current captain
Brian Lara and former captain Courtney Walsh are listed in the World
XI lineup. The stance of the WICB in relation to this series is not
known.
In a report published on the PMG-owned India Post website and
attributed to the "India Post News Bureau" yesterday, PMG CEO Romesh
K.Japra said "The problem is not at the level of individual
players. They are all more than willing to come. But we are facing
some obstacles from national and international cricket authorities who
are not inclined to let them participate."
Dr Japra was reported as saying that there was pressure being exerted
by national boards for the All-Star Cup not to go ahead. "But that
has only strengthened our resolve to go ahead with the series which
millions of fans in North America are looking forward to," he was
quoted as saying.
Unconfirmed reports indicate that all invited players were offered $
US 25,000 each to take part in the tournament.
The teams, as re-released by PMG yesterday, are as follows (and the
spelling is theirs):
Asia XI: Arjuna Ranatunga, Arvinda D' Silva, Sanath Jayasurya,
Chaminda Vaas, Vikramasinghe, Jayawardane, Navjot Sidhu, Vinod Kambli,
Maninder Singh, Vijay Yadav, Atul Wasan, Praveen Amre.
World XI: Brian Lara, Jimmy Adams, Courtney Walsh, Phil Simmons,
Ridley Jacob, Marvin Dhillon, Chander Paul, Gavin Robertson, Mark
Taylor, Paul Reiffel, Andy Flower, Neil Johnson, Henry Olanga, Ravindu
Shah."
The first match is scheduled to take part at 3Com Park (formerly
Candlestick Park), San Francisco, on Tuesday August 3.
Source :: CricInfo365