Cricket Focus: South Africa selection is now black and white (8 August 1999)
The United Cricket Board of South Africa have announced a three-year strategy to give non-whites 50-50 representation in all areas of the sport - except at first class and Test level
08-Aug-1999
8 August 1999
Cricket Focus: South Africa selection is now black and white
Electronic Telegraph
The United Cricket Board of South Africa have announced a three-year
strategy to give non-whites 50-50 representation in all areas of the
sport - except at first class and Test level.
The charter details implementation of targets for scorers, umpires,
groundsmen, coaches, administrators and in age-group cricket, with
the aim of making the game fully representative by 2003, when South
Africa will host the next World Cup.
UCB managing director Ali Bacher also revealed that by the end of the
third year they hope 44 non-white players will be among the 121 first
choices at the provinces. "It will filter through to the national
team and the issue won't even be discussed in two years," said Bacher.
Bangladesh has appointed former South African cricketer Eddie Barlow
as the country's coach for the next two years, Bangladesh Cricket
Board (BCB) president Saber Hossain Chowdhury confirmed yesterday.
He said Barlow's appointment was approved at a meeting on Friday, and
he will start on Sept 1. "Beside coaching, his responsibility will be
to oversee the development of cricket as 'Director of Development',
said Saber.
Barlow, 59, succeeds former West Indian opening batsman Gordon
Greenidge, who was sacked during the World Cup following a row over
team selection.
The long-running match-fixing saga involving Pakistani stars Wasim
Akram, Salim Malik and Ijaz Ahmed should finally be resolved on Aug
17 when Mr Justice Qayyoum considers the evidence - but don't bank on
it. There have been so many changes at the game's top table in
Pakistan with Government intervention that the players, all pleading
innocence, are talking as if they are victims of a political
campaign.
Two of the most famous leagues in club cricket may merge into one.
The Lancashire League and Central Lancashire League, whose clubs have
attracted some of the greatest names in cricket, are suffering from
the growth of the international game. These days it is becoming
harder to attract the players to pull in the attendances.
Now Central Lancashire League chairman Bob Dearden is backing a move
for the leagues to merge with a two-division structure of promotion
and relegation.
England's Mike Atherton had a special reason for interest in
yesterday's Watford-Wimbledon Premier League match, which also gave
rise to a likely quiz question.
Which current Premiership player has taken part in a first class
cricket match? The answer is Watford's Steve Palmer who was in the
same Cambridge United side as Atherton when they played Lancashire
during their student days.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)