Port-Of-Spain Exactly a year since taking up his post, West Indies
manager Ricky Skerritt delivered a stirring mission statement on
behalf of himself and his team yesterday.
Stating that it had been a growth year for the team, he dismissed
misconceptions of the lifestyle of his players, defined his management
objectives and derided comparisons with the ways of other teams.
He was speaking to the media at the launching of celebrations of the
50th Test at the Queen's Park Oval, the second against South Africa,
starting tomorrow.
Contrary to public rumour, the West Indies team is not a bunch of
party-goers who drink alcohol and stay out until five in the morning,
Skerritt said.
However, we don't run a military camp and we don't have sentries
outside every door.
We don't delve into private lives, as the media tried to do in
Australia, he said, in a clear reference to the Press attention on
Brian Lara's girlfriend, Lynnsey Ward, during the recent tour.
Skerritt said he and his management team were trying to teach the
young players about life and (about) understanding what is it is being
a professional.
Some have grown up with bad habits for many years and we can't expect
to turn that around overnight.
He added that they were becoming more disciplined and the work ethic
was improving.
The manager was adamant that his players should not try to copy the
ways of those from other countries.
They will not be Australian, they will not be English, they will not
be South African, he said.
They are West Indians and they must abide by the values and traditions
that West Indians have brought to the game of cricket.
If anyone, whether inside or outside the team, tries to interfere with
that, I don't want any part of it, he asserted.
Skerritt, a 44-year-old Kittitan business executive and Rhodes
Scholar, was appointed manager last February on a three-year contract
in succession to Clive Lloyd.
His first Test in charge, a come-from-behind win against Zimbabwe,
began at Queen's Park on March 16 last year.
The West Indies won both Tests in the series and then took the series
against Pakistan with the only outright result in the three Tests, by
one wicket. But two subsequent series overseas have ended in defeat,
3-1 in England and 5-0 in Australia.