New tour sponsor found for West Indies, talks continue (8 November 1998)
LONDON, Nov 8 (AFP) - A new sponsor has been found for the West Indies squad, currently involved in a row over payments for their proposed tour of South Africa, it emerged here Sunday
08-Nov-1998
8 November 1998
New tour sponsor found for West Indies, talks continue
Agence France-Presse
LONDON, Nov 8 (AFP) - A new sponsor has been found for the West Indies
squad, currently involved in a row over payments for their proposed tour
of South Africa, it emerged here Sunday.
South African cricket chief Dr Ali Bacher announced the news as talks
at a London hotel between the rebel cricketers and the West Indies
management went into the night.
A deal has been struck by former South African wicketkeeper David
Richardson, who was approached by the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB),
Bacher said, raising hopes of a breakthrough in the negotiations.
Richardson, a qualified lawyer, has a sports marketing company, ESPM,
based in Johannesburg.
He told South African Bacher that the deal had been done on Friday.
Speaking at the Heathrow Hotel, where negotiations between the WICB and
the striking players were still continuing after four hours, Dr Bacher
said: "I told Chris Dehring, the West Indies marketing manager, about the
deal when he arrived here.
"The players don't know about it yet but I expect they will be told
during negotiations."
Speaking in South Africa, Richardson said that his firm had been
appointed by the WICB to help raise sponsorship long before the current
dispute began.
Richardson stressed that the deal had nothing to do with the United
Cricket Board of South Africa. "This has nothing to do with them. The
sponsors will be a West Indian Board sponsor.
"The fact that it is a South African company and the money is coming
out of South Africa is not really the point."
But Richardson strongly hinted that sacked team captain Brian Lara and
vice-captain Carl Hooper would be vital to the deal and would have to be
reinstated.
Meanwhile SABC television sports chief Edward Griffiths said the
presence of the two star batsman was vital for full coverage of the tour.
The national broadcaster holds the right to screen world tour matches.
Griffiths said: "We won't put up with anything less than a full strength
side. We owe it to our sponsors, viewers and advertisers."
Bacher added: "It's good money. But we want to announce the full
details when the team arrives in South Africa."
He was still confident that the tour would start on time on Tuesday.
"There are four flights out of Heathrow tonight and we have made a
provisional booking for the West Indies players.
"We're expecting 300,000 people to come to the five Tests. I think that
black support will be especially strong in Port Elizabeth and in Cape Town
I expect 30 percent of the crowd will be coloured with a strong Indian
presence in Durban."
Earlier, WICB president Pat Rousseau flew into London in a bid to
resolve the row.
Rousseau went straight into a meeting with Courtney Walsh, president of
the West Indies Players' Association, accompanied by Jimmy Adams and Lara
and Hooper - the men Rousseau sacked from the tour over their pay and
conditions demands.
The players have insisted that Lara and Hooper, captain and
vice-captain, must be reinstated if the tour is to take place.