Preparations for the inaugural Gulf Cup hot up (5 Dec 1999)
While the competition organisers had previously intimated in the last edition of `Cricket Beyond The Test World' that officials of the Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates would be able to choose from their domestic
05-Dec-1999
5 December 1999
Preparations for the inaugural Gulf Cup hot up
The status of next month's Gulf Cup has been raised with
news that the six competing teams will have to meet ICC
qualification rules
While the competition organisers had previously intimated in
the last edition of `Cricket Beyond The Test World' that
officials of the Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia
and United Arab Emirates would be able to choose from their
domestic leagues, the tournament administrator, Mr. Hatyar
Khan, said all players would have to meet the usual
International Cricket Council qualification rules.
"Five players must be nationals of that country," Mr. Khan
warned, while adding that other players will have had to
serve a minimum residential period.
Dates for the tournament have been confirmed, with the
inaugural meeting of Persian Gulf national teams to be held
in Dubai from January 23-29.
In several ways, the staging of this tournament represents
yet another major step in the ongoing `formalisation' of
cricket at the non-Test level by the ICC.
Only the United Arab Emirates has competed internationally
before, while Bahrain. Oman and Saudi Arabia are not members
of the ICC.
More importantly it changes the focus of the cricket
administration in the Gulf. In the past, officials there had
been happy just to run their competitions as expatriate pasttimes for the local South Asian immigrant population with
little concern for a broader organisational structure.
The imposition of ICC qualification rules `may' help create
a desire among Persian Gulf cricket officials to bring the
game to the Arab population.
`Cricket Beyond The Test World' will bring you news every
fortnight of the build-up to the Gulf Cup.