St George's Park groundsman shines at turf management course
The assistant groundsman of the Eastern Province Cricket Board, Adi Carter, was one of the top students at a recent Pretoria Technikon Turf Management Course
12-Jul-2001
The assistant groundsman of the Eastern Province Cricket Board, Adi Carter, was
one of the top students at a recent Pretoria Technikon Turf Management
Course.
Carter (27 was selected by the
United Cricket Board to study the course in turf management at the end
of May this year. The 15-day course is considered one of the best
courses for people involved in the turfgrass industry.
The initiative by the UCB to send and pay for young groundsman to attend
these courses is aimed at ensuring that South Africa continue to have the
best qualified and experienced staff to look after South Africa's cricket.
This is especially important for Eastern Province with one of the 2003 World
Cup semi-finals being played at St George's Park in Port Elizabeth.
According to Carter, who studied Sports Administration and Marketing at the
PE Technikon, the course covers all aspects involved in turfgrass
management. The experience he gained from working under EPCB groundsman
Andrew McLean helped him enormously to gain an overall understanding of
turfgrass management with special emphasis on pitch preparation, maintenance
and management of machinery.
Carter came sixth out of
28 students in the course. He will use the knowledge he gained to
help McLean ensure that the St George's Park pitches are ready for 2003.
Besides Carter's work at St. George's Park he is also responsible for the
PPC and MTN development projects and his goal for the future is to give more
assistance to schools and clubs. The pitches that fall directly under his
management include the Dan Qeqe Stadium.
"I think my work is important because the better the pitches, the better
chance we have to create opportunities to develop first class players. From
schools to first class cricket we should set the highest standards and EP
has already proved that we are on the right track in achieving this. This
can be verified by a computer package devised by the UCB, which analyses
pitch performance, " said Carter.