Cup '99 no song and dance (12 May 1999)
London - They have proclaimed the seventh World Cup "A Carnival of Cricket" but Trinidad's Mas, Guyana's Mashramani and Barbados' Kadooment it certainly won't be
12-May-1999
12 May 1999
Cup '99 no song and dance
Tony Cozier
London - They have proclaimed the seventh World Cup "A Carnival
of Cricket" but Trinidad's Mas, Guyana's Mashramani and
Barbados' Kadooment it certainly won't be.
It doesn't even come close to the Notting Hall variety and, to
ensure that there is no confusion over the English concept of
the cricket-carnival connection, the England and Wales Cricket
Board (ECB), the organisers, have plainly detailed the
contradiction to their competition slogan on each of their
tickets.
Among the items that are "prohibited and may not be taken into
any match" are klaxons, megaphones and compressed air or
gas-operated horns.
There are to be no face masks, banners, fancy dress or "oversize
headwear of a nature which has the potential to cause injury to
its wearer or other spectators or which could severely restrict
the view of, or be construed as 'offensive' to, other
spectators".
Also banned are bands "other than those with prior agreement in
writing from the organisers".
National flags, without flagpoles, will be allowed but
"continued use of musical instruments, which causes annoyance to
other spectators, will result in them being confiscated".
So there will be nothing resembling Sabina's Red Stripe Mound or
Queen's Park Trini Posse Stand. No Chicki's Disco will be
pumping out carnival sounds between overs.
And if Mac Fingall is thinking of coming along, he can leave his
trumpet and drums back in St. Philip.
At half the grounds, there will be "a total ban on the
importation of alcohol" and at those where there isn't - among
them Lord's and the Oval - no more than four cans of beer or the
equivalent in wine will be allowed in.
Rum, whisky, vodka and other spirits are all on the banned list.
There won't even be the kind of elaborate opening ceremony that
has become virtually mandatory at such presitigious
international sporting events that fill television screens in
millions of homes around the world.
Instead, according to Press spokesman Andy Edwards, British
Prime Minister Tony Blair will declare the tournament officially
open to the backdrop of "a brief, colourful show involving
children" at Lord's on Friday.
After that, England, the hosts, and Sri Lanka, the champions,
get the show on the road. Over the next six weeks, that road
will wind through 18 cities.
With 12 teams and 42 matches, it is the biggest cricket event
ever staged in the country that gave birth to the game. Yet the
build-up has been strangely low-key.
Most of last Sunday's national newspapers carried special
preview supplements and there has been plenty of coverage of the
preparation matches. But not nearly as much as there
understandably has been for the climax of the English football
season.
Perhaps the organisers feel they don't have to worry. After all,
all the tickets have been sold. But it is the public awareness
of a sport that needs a boost here that is of current concern
and a World Cup, properly promoted, could provide that.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)