Clive Lloyd: I've had enough
Wellington - Unable to reap the success he got as captain, Clive Lloyd is stepping down as manager of the West Indies Test and One-Day cricket team
24-Dec-1999
Wellington - Unable to reap the success he got as captain, Clive Lloyd is
stepping down as manager of the West Indies Test and One-Day cricket team.
Sir Vivian Richards, however, will apply for the post of coach although
appearing to fall short of the requirements.
The disclosures from Lloyd and Sir Vivian come days after the West Indies
Cricket Board (WICB) advertised for the jobs of manager and coach in
regional newspapers.
Lloyd, speaking to his former team-mate, pacer Colin Croft in Wellington
days ahead of the second Test against New Zealand, said the tour would
definitely be his last as manager.
'I think I've had enough. I have given my all here to West Indies
cricket,' he said in response to a query as to whether he would be
applying for the post of manager for next year's home series against
Zimbabwe and Pakistan.
Sir Vivian, who succeeded Lloyd as West Indies captain based his
suitability for the job of coach on 'doubling' as skipper and unofficial
coach during his stint at the helm of the regional side.
'We have been sent a fax about what is going to take place in future,' he
said in reference to the advertisement.
In outlining the qualifications and experience for the job of coach, the
WICB said the coach must hold an advanced coaching certificate, a
certificate or training in sports psychology and a minimum of three years'
practical experience in coaching at first-class level.
'I've got my claims and most certainly, I will be putting in my
application,' Sir Vivian said.
'I think that they need some sort of certificate in what needs to be done;
but having captained the West Indies for five years and without a coach
and things like that, you can at times be a father figure and also be a
coach in that particular sense.'
Sir Vivian, the only West Indies captain never to lose a Test series, took
over for one match during the World Cup in England last summer when the
late Malcolm Marshall took ill and was subsequently appointed as coach for
the current tour of New Zealand.
'Everyone looks to deal with the coaching manual that is set up by the MCC
or whoever but ... I do like to implement the things which I believe that
have made us successful,' Sir Vivian said.
Lloyd also said that 'whoever takes over (as manager), won't be taking
over a bad team' since management has 'worked on a few things'.