Officials react to Clive Lloyd Academy - WI behind time (12 May 1998)
While the British are getting ready to put the future of their cricket in the hands of the Clive Lloyd Academy, some of the planners in regional cricket are at odds over which course is best for West Indies cricket
12-May-1998
Tuesday, May 12, 1998
Officials react to Clive Lloyd Academy - WI behind time
By GARTH WATTLEY
"OUR PLANNING is ten years behind hand!"
While the British are getting ready to put the future of their
cricket in the hands of the Clive Lloyd Academy, some of the
planners in regional cricket are at odds over which course is
best for West Indies cricket.
The British Sports and Arts foundation is pumping £2.5 million
into the Manchester-based academy which has been named after the
former Lancashire and West Indies captain, who is also the
current West Indies manager.
And reacting to the news, Alloy Lequay, president and CEO of the
Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board voiced concern that the wheels
of the West Indies Board were turning too slowly.
While first saying he saw no conflict of interest in having a
Lloyd Academy since, "Clive has been a resident of the UK for
many years and calling it the Clive LLoyd Academy is merely
paying tribute to him," Lequay also declared, "it merely
reinforces our thinking some time ago." That thinking, Lequay
told the Express, has seen the regional cricket body pay less
than earnest attention to the idea of an academy for the
Caribbean. "Four years ago," Lequay said, "the Teddy Griffith
Strategic Committee looked at the idea of an academy.
And as chairman of the Cricket Development Committee of the West
Indies Board, my Committee was asked to do a feasibility study
since the end of 1995. And it's on the back burner now".
Asked whether England's intended use of a Windies great was not
ironic, Lequay conceded that, "in a sense it is. Clive has so
much to contribute to West Indies cricket. All our top players
have been doing development work in other parts of the world," he
continued. "But money is part of the problem."
WICB Chief Executive officer Stephen Camacho however told the
Expressthe Board had not yet given up on an academy.
And while he admitted to having heard nothing of the Lloyd
Academy in the UK as of yesterday, he indicated that the WICB
were exploring another option.
The venture is part of wide-ranging efforts to get the regional
game in shape for the 21st century. But by that time, Lequay
hopes to have a Trinidad and Tobago academy at Brechin Castle up
and running. "The plans are well advanced," he said of the
project which is expected to cost TT$ 1.8 million.
"All planning permission (two years in coming) has been granted
and drawings have been completed. The facility will have two
indoor nets, accommodation for 16 people, a gym and in the
adjacent headquarters, library services," Lequay said.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)