Call for umpires' quota (11 July 1999)
Worried about the relatively small number of umpires with both first-class and Test cricket experience, the West Indies Cricket Umpires Association wants the regional board to expand the Test umpires' panel and to limit the number of first-class
11-Jul-1999
11 July 1999
Call for umpires' quota
Tony Best
Worried about the relatively small number of umpires with both
first-class and Test cricket experience, the West Indies Cricket
Umpires Association wants the regional board to expand the Test
umpires' panel and to limit the number of first-class games in
which each umpire can officiate.
The plan calls for the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) to
restrict umpires to three games in the domestic tournaments.
Some of them now stand in four.
The association believes its proposal would open the door so
that more umpires would be exposed to the highest standard of
play.
At the same time, the association is asking the board to expand
the Test umpires' panel from two to four.
The strategy was worked out at the recent convention of the West
Indies umpires' body held in New York City.
"We need to have more umpires with first class and Test
experience," said Rudolph Harper, president of the umpires'
association. "So, what we are proposing is that more umpires be
given the exposure."
He said some of the best umpires anywhere could be found in the
West Indies but they were too few. That was why the convention
had approved the plan.
Indeed, the retired Guyanese judge described Steve Bucknor as
the best umpire in the world.
"We think that things have improved," said Harper. "Our umpires
are better trained."
Harper praised the board for its positive attitude to the
Umpires' Association, saying the relationship between the two
was "very good".
He had a complaint which was directed more at Jamaica and
Guyana, whose local associations last year went outside of the
panel of umpires agreed to by the board and the association and
selected other umpires.
"We deprecate that move seriously. We hope that the WICB, as it
agreed many years ago, would only select umpires from the panel
presented by the association."
As for the expansion of the pool of first-class umpires, Harper
said it was necessary to act in order to end the frustration
felt by younger umpires who want a chance to show what they were
worth.
"The young umpires are becoming frustrated," he said. "They feel
they can't get good matches.
"That's why we are recommending to the board that no umpire must
have more than three matches in one season.
That limit would apply to regional first-class games and Test
matches, he pointed out.
Harper lamented the fact that too few former first-class and
Test cricketers in the Caribbean were coming forward to serve as
umpires, and he blamed the abuse often heaped on officials who
stand in games for the problem.
"They say they know what umpires go through and they are not
going to go through that," he explained.
"In cricket, umpiring and groundsmanship are two areas which are
taken for granted. We seem to believe that anybody can be an
umpire or a groundsman.
Harper called on all cricket associations in the West Indies "to
pay much more regard to the umpires and the groundsmen".
At the convention, two Barbadians passed the examinations which
would allow them to stand in any level of cricket in the region.
One of them was Martin Parris, a Starcom network sports reporter
who is the son of Stanton Parris, a retired Test umpire.
The other is Hamilton Reid, who lives in Brooklyn and is one of
the leading umpires in the US.
Source :: The Barbados Nation