Grenada's Prime Minister Keith Mitchell has repeated
his call for the setting up of a Caribbean professional cricket
league.
"I am convinced the time has come for the Caribbean governments, the
West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the corporate community to come
together and work towards the establshment of a professional Caribbean
cricket league," Mitchell said in an address at the launching ceremony
of the Shell Cricket Academy at St. George's University in Grenada on
Monday night.
He said there was a "definite need" for such a league so that West
Indian cricketers could earn a living from the game. "Moreover, a
professional Caribbean cricket league will go a long way to improving
the game in general (in the West Indies)," he added.
Mitchell, a former Grenada captain and avid supporter of West Indies
cricket, has been instrumental in his government's construction of a
new US$25 million cricket stadium with a capacity of 15 000.
His government had supported the academy "from Day 1", he said, and
saw it as a "turning point" for West Indies cricket.
"Based on the current performances of the West Indies team and the
teams in the regional competitions and the overall quality of our
cricket, the only direction it can go in the months and years ahead is
up and this academy will play a significant role in that upward
mobility," Mitchell said.
"It will make better players and better people of those who are
enrolled," he added. Emphasing that young cricketers had to "stay
focused and understand the importance of education, discipline,
commitment, training, patriotism and pride", Mitchell referred to the
strike by West Indies players at London's Heathrow Airport prior to
the 1998-99 tour of South Africa.
"There may well have been extremely legitimate reasons and concerns on
the part of the players," he said. "However, we are compelled to ask
in the context of that particular tour, what happened to patriotism,
what happened to pride in oneself, pride in one's race, pride in
one's sense of history?"