Cozier On Cricket: Final Straw? I Hope So (25 October 1998)
Cozier On Cricket: Final Straw
25-Oct-1998
25 October 1998
Cozier On Cricket: Final Straw? I Hope So
by Tony Cozier
Cozier On Cricket
It is impossible to ignore the negative elements that suddenly
engulfed the 1998 Red Stripe Bowl at its most visible moment:
the fanfared Final Four Weekend when the championship would be
decided.
There were positive aspects as well, primarily the emergence of
a few exciting young players, but these inevitably were
overshadowed by the administrative shambles that have seemingly
become an inescapable part of West Indies cricket.
The embarrassing confusion over who had won the calculator
decision in the rain-shortened semi-final, the doubts over which
team had topped the preliminary group in Guyana and the
installation of teams of cricketers, two to share the same bed,
at a resort hotel meant for romancing couples was what has
become standard operating procedure for those who run the game
in these parts.
All of this was compounded by the disgraceful bully-boy tantrum
of Curtly Ambrose, one of the greatest and most popular of
current West Indies cricketers, marching fully 30 yards from his
bowling mark to verbally abuse square-leg umpire Thomas Wilson,
and by the equal disgrace of the pifling US$24 punishment for
someone who had been already twice severely reprimanded for his
mercurial behaviour by the WICB.
Such misdemeanours have all simply added to the host of others
that have so distressed and humiliated us over the past year -
the confusion and controversy over the change of captaincy, the
selection of seven over-age players for the Youth World Cup, the
abandonment of the Sabina Park Test because of its cart-track of
a pitch, the shambles of the Nortel Youth Tournament and a few
other less spectacular, but no less inexcusable, gaffes in
between.
It seems as if the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and its
territorial affiliates have initiated a new law unto themselves
to stand along Murphy's and others of that ilk.
It is being etched in stone with every fiasco: Whatever there is
to go wrong, will go wrong.
Surely the time has long passed for some action to halt this
continuing decline into mediocrity.
When he assumed the presidency of the WICB in 1996, Pat
Rousseau, recognised as a no-nonsense leader from his reputation
in business in Jamaica, issued this warning: "I'm going to be
very strong on accountability and performance.
"I really have no intention of carrying along a set of
passengers. The board was told that clearly."
Two years later, those words ring hollow. The bus he is driving
has become an accident waiting to happen and still all his
passengers remain aboard.
The president was there at the Kaiser Sports Club in Jamaica
last weekend and witnessed the turbulence himself.
He would have recognised that the appointed match referee for
the second semi-final showed himself to be ill-suited to the job
and should have been immediately replaced.
There were several well-qualified former Test players in the
vicinity and available. Instead, the original choice was
reappointed for the final.
Rousseau would have known that the Leeward Islands made an
entirely valid point when they moved out of their accommodation
and sought somewhere else where two men did not have to share
the same bed.
In some countries, such an act could lead to a prison sentence.
And he would surely have known that Ambrose's tirade at the
umpire was unacceptable and worthy of a penalty far tougher than
what amounts to no more than the cost of a round of drinks at
any bar on Jamaica's north coast.
If nothing more is done, we know why. Ambrose is a big man in
West Indies cricket. But it is precisely because of his standing
that better is expected of him.
Thankfully, there were some aspects of the Bowl to cheer West
Indian spirits.
While there is justification for the other territories to feel
excluded by its continuing staging exclusively in Guyana and
Jamaica, the matches did take the game to the country areas in
those territories and the response was heartening.
There were, reportedly, 10 000 at Albion in Guyana for the home
team's game against the Windwards and excellent turnouts at such
places as Uitvlught and Enmore in Guyana and Alpart in Jamaica.
To see Kaiser packed with around 7 000 for a final yet again not
involving Jamaica was evidence that cricket still has its
support.
Now the people of the other territories deserve the chance to
see their teams in action as well.
If it is misleading to read too much into performances in the
limited-overs game, there was unmistakeable evidence that a few
new players of real talent emerged.
The Jamaican left-hand batsman and off-spinner Chris Gayle, the
Barbadian left-arm all-rounder Ryan Hinds and the Windwards'
batsman and off-spinner Vernon Dumas are all in their late teens
or early 20s and did enough to suggest they would be around for
a long time.
And Dumas displayed the qualities of a true sportsman when, on
his own accord, he turned over his US$250 Man Of The Match award
to the Roy Fredericks Benefit Fund.
The Leewards' newcomers, opener Wilden Cornwall and off-spinner
Anthony Lake, had the look of quality cricketers.
All we need is the administration to match.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)