ICC chief 'impressed' with World Cup preparations
Malcolm Speed, chief executive officer of the International Cricket Council in London, has voiced his approval for the way the 2003 Cricket World Cup is being organised in South Africa
Rodney Hartman
17-Aug-2001
Malcolm Speed, chief executive officer of the International Cricket Council
in London, has voiced his approval for the way the 2003 Cricket World Cup
is being organised in South Africa.
Speed has spent the past two days in Johannesburg on his first visit to
South Africa since his recent appointment to the key executive position in
world cricket. During his stay, he attended a 2003 Cricket World Cup Policy
Committee meeting where, among other things, he witnessed a presentation on
safety and security plans for the tournament.
The ICC chief also held extensive talks with Ali Bacher, executive
director of the tournament, and members of his senior management team.
"I am very impressed with the infracture that has already been put in place
with the tournament still 18 months away," said Speed. "In my view, the
World Cup management group is doing very solid work towards delivering an
outstanding Cricket World Cup."
Speed was accompanied on his visit by Campbell Jamieson, commercial
manager of ICC Development International Limited, the commercial rights
owner and official organiser of the World Cup. With them was Mark
Whitehead of World Sport Group Limited which has acquired the sponsorship
and television rights along with Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation Limited.
The eighth Cricket World Cup - featuring 14 teams and 56 matches - will be
staged in South Africa during February-March 2003.