Talks on Tour future remain deadlocked (8 November 1998)
LONDON, Nov 8 (AFP) - Seven hours of talks over the future of the West Indies' cricket tour of South Africa reamined deadlocked after seven hours of talks at a Heathrow hotel Sunday
08-Nov-1998
8 November 1998
Talks on Tour future remain deadlocked
Agence France-Presse
LONDON, Nov 8 (AFP) - Seven hours of talks over the future of the West
Indies' cricket tour of South Africa reamined deadlocked after seven hours
of talks at a Heathrow hotel Sunday.
When the meeting broke up, Courtney Walsh, president of the West Indies
Players' Association, issued a terse statement.
"Negotiations are still going on. We will be having further meetings
tonight and tomorrow morning," said the statement.
"I'm going back to my hotel to talk to the rest of the players."
Walsh's statement ended an extraordinary day which began with West
Indies Cricket Board president Pat Rousseau checking in from Barbados
before going straight into a meeting with Walsh, Jimmy Adams and the two
men he sacked from the tour - captain Brian Lara and his deputy Carl
Hooper.
The players were insistent that the two controversial batsmen had to be
reinstated after a pay dispute.
Rousseau had previously been adamant that no compromise was possible.
It emerged from Lara's agent Barrie Gill that a leading firm of City
solicitors had been brought in on Friday to try to help break the
deadlock.
Gill said: "We brought Collyer-Bristow in to advise the players. We
still hope the players will be on the plane tomorrow so that they can be
ready for the first match on Tuesday."
South African cricket chief Ali Bacher said: "I remain optimistic. The
negotiations are taking longer than I would have liked but I'm sure things
will be resolved.
"The West Indian Board have conveyed the sticking points to me, but
it's not for me to comment."
The saga took another twist today when it was revealed that a sponsor
had been found for the tourists.
A deal has been struck by former South African wicketkeeper David
Richardson, who was approached by the WICB.
Richardson, a qualified lawyer, now has the only sports marketing
company, ESPM, based in Johannesburg. He told Bacher that the deal had
been done on Friday.
Speaking in South Africa, Richardson said that his firm had been
appointed by the WICB to help raise sponsorship long before the current
dispute began.
Richardson stressed that the deal had nothing to do with the United
Cricket Board of South Africa.
"This has nothing to do with them. The sponsors will be a West Indian
Board sponsor.
"The fact that it is a South African company and the money is coming
out of South Africa is not really the point."
But Richardson strongly hinted that sacked team captain Brian Lara and
vice-captain Carl Hooper would be vital to the deal and would have to be
reinstated.
Meanwhile SABC television sports chief Edward Griffiths said the
presence of the two star batsman was vital for full coverage of the tour.
The national broadcaster holds the right to screen world tour matches.
Griffiths said: "We won't put up with anything less than a full strength
side. We owe it to our sponsors, viewers and advertisers."