Kenya In Call For 'One-Day' Status (9 Jul 1996)
KENYA, whose cricketers brought the World Cup to life with their victory over the West Indies, proposed a new status for emerging countries during the meeting of the Associate Members of the International Cricket Council at Lord`s
09-Jul-1996
9 July 1996
Kenya in call for `one-day status`
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
KENYA, whose cricketers brought the World Cup to life with their
victory over the West Indies, proposed a new status for emerging
countries during the meeting of the Associate Members of the
International Cricket Council at Lord`s yesterday. Their idea
will be discussed by the full members, the nine Test-playing nations, when they have their own meeting today in advance of
the full two-day get-together tomorrow and on Thursday.
If they can find a consensus on the delicate matter of who should
succeed Clyde Walcott as chairman next year, the Test countries may well give their blessing to the Kenyan initiative, so
long as it does not alter a voting system which is already too
heavily weighted towards countries where the game is very much a
minority sport.
Kenya`s idea is that there should be an intermediate `one-day
status` for countries who fulfil four criteria: a solid infrastructure, with cricket played at schools, club, district
and provincial level; a sound financial base; an established programme of first-class (three or four-day) games; and grounds
of international standard.
Robbie Armstrong, of the Kenya Cricket Association, has proposed a status which would entitle these countries to entry to
the four-yearly World Cups and to invitations to other regional
one-day tournaments.
Armstrong said: "The benefits of this would be tremendous at
local level. It would give players and adminstrators something
to work for and a stepping-stone to Test status which is not
there at present."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)