Simmons has a go at Simpson
If Phil Simmons had his way, Bobby Simpson would be back on a plane or even a boat heading for Australia, never to return as a cricket coach in the West Indies
Barry Wilkinson
18-Nov-2001
If Phil Simmons had his way, Bobby Simpson would be back on
a plane or even a boat heading for Australia, never to
return as a cricket coach in the West Indies.
Simmons, the former Trinidad and Tobago and West Indies
opener, is so incensed by Simpson's recent comments that
Brian Lara is not a great player, that he says the West
Indies Cricket Board should terminate the contract they
awarded him to coach Under-23 players in Jamaica.
Bobby Simpson making joke. How can you tell me that a man
score 375 runs, 501, 200-plus, his gem of 153 and more and
he [Simpson] can come and sit here and tell me that Lara
isn't great, then he [Simpson] should be on the next flight
out of Jamaica, because we stand for too much crap in the
Caribbean, Simmons said last week, while here for the Life
of Barbados Pro Am Cricket Festival.
While Simmons strongly disagrees with Simpson's comments, he
is more annoyed with the fact that he boldly made them while
working here in the Caribbean.
Simmons contends that people in the Caribbean always take
too much nonsense with a smile and allow people to air their
views without censorship.
He claims that Simpson could not have said the things he did
about any other player in the world in that players'
country.
He can't go to Australia and say that [the late] Sir Don
Bradman wasn't great. He can't go to India and say that
about Tendulkar, it would be so stupid, said the 38-yearold Simmons, who made 1002 runs in 26 Tests with one
century.
Meanwhile, Simmons also lamented the sad state of injuries
plaguing the West Indies team.
He says the West Indies officials don't understand the
process of getting cricketers fit.
Nobody can get fit in ten days and that is what we are
trying to do with these guys. I don't know who give the
orders but it is obvious that the team is not fit enough and
the team has to get fit, Simmons said.
If you push guys in ten days and 20 days to do what they
should be doing in three months, their muscles are not going
to take it,
Simmons, who is coach of the Trinidad and Tobago team, says
he plans to build his curriculum vitae as a coach before he
aspires in four or five years to complete his dream as West
Indies coach.