Boost for the 'boys' (17 March 1999)
Cricket fans in Barbados will get their chance to show how much they love our players
17-Mar-1999
17 March 1999
Boost for the 'boys'
The Barbados Nation
Cricket fans in Barbados will get their chance to show how much
they love our players.
THE NATION newspaper yesterday announced its Rally 'Round The
West Indies plan - a way to support the team for the third Test
against Australia starting here on March 26.
This NATION initiative has the support of the president of the
Barbados Cricket Association, Tony Marshall, and is being done
in conjunction with Branckers on Fontabelle.
A committee headed by Wilfred Field, Advertising Manager of the
NATION, met yesterday at NATION House to set the nationwide
rallyling cry in motion.
The committee comprises NATION President Harold Hoyte, Associate
Managing Editor Roxanne Gibbs, Sales and Product Development
Manager Elaine King, Sales Executive Orville Blackman, President
of the BCA, Tony Marshall, Managing Director of Branckers Rawle
Brancker, Alison Saunders-Franklin of Saunders-Franklin
Associates, and Paul Skinner and Judy Millington of the BCA
marketing committee.
The stage is now set for the national rally 'round campaign to
begin on Monday, March 22.
The plan will see among other things fans wearing red and white
to cricket on the first two days of the Test; the signing a
life-size card to be presented to the team; streets hung with
Rally 'Round The West Indies banners; motorists who support the
Windies driving with their headlights on during the day; radio
stations playing cricket calypsos during cricket week; and David
Rudder specially flown in to lead in the singing of the cricket
anthem on the first day of the match, when those at Kensington
will be asked to sing loudly and lustily.
Field, whose idea it was to launch the national support
campaign, said yesterday:
"The West Indies team is the one institution which unites us
all, and thus it was with that in mind that I felt the need to
do something which would inspire the boys from a national
level."
Last Thursday in her Editor's Diary, Roxanne Gibbs appealed to
Barbadians to stop the negativism. "Stop the abuse which is
pulling the boys lower than they already are," she wrote.
"Our boys now have 'home field' advantage. Playing before your
home crowd is supposed to give a team a psychological boost ...
let us do just that!"
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)