April 1 1998
Brits May Rearrange WI Test Tour Schedule
by Tony Cozier/NATIONSPORT
THE present four-year cycle of England cricket tours to the
Caribbean is in jeopardy because of the recent increase in the
number of teams with Test status, West Indies Cricket Board
(WICB) chief executive officer Stephen Camacho said, yesterday.
He said the WICB and the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB)
are still negotiating over future bi-lateral tours and "hope to
have the matter resolved this year".
Only Australia of the other full members of the International
Cricket Council (ICC) enjoy a similar four-year reciprocal
arrangement with England.
"Regular England tours are important to us from several points
of view," Camacho said. "But the entry of South Africa and
Zimbabwe to the Test scene in the past few years has put
pressure on the itineraries."
At present, the West Indies have confirmed a full tour of
England, with five Tests and One-Day Internationals, in 2000 but
no date has yet been set for England's next visit to the
Caribbean. Australia are the visitors next season, Pakistan and
New Zealand in 2000 and South Africa in 2001.
Four-year cycle
"England have maintained a four-year cycle of a full Test series
on a home and away basis with us now since the 1970s and we are
keen for that to continue," Camacho said. "But it has become
more difficult to fit in everyone."
England's tours have proved a financial boon both to the WICB,
mainly through TV rights, and to the relevant national economies
through the influx of cricket tourists, especially in Barbados
and Antigua.
But, Camacho pointed out, England also have overdue commitments
to other Test-playing countries.
They are scheduled to tour Pakistan in 2000 for the first time
in 12 years and India in 2001 for the first time in eight years.
The cycle for West Indies-England series was previously eight
years. The regularity was increased with the growing strength
and popularity of the West Indies team under Frank Worrell and
Garry Sobers so that the West Indies toured England three times
in the 1960s Ð in 1963, 1966 and 1969 (sharing with New
Zealand).
It has been on a four-year rotation ever since.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)