West Indies board warned (11 November 1998)
THE British agent who represented the West Indies players during their weekend talks in London predicted yesterday that there would be further militant action if the Caribbean cricket authorities failed to change their policies
11-Nov-1998
11 November 1998
West Indies board warned
By Charles Randall
THE British agent who represented the West Indies players during
their weekend talks in London predicted yesterday that there
would be further militant action if the Caribbean cricket
authorities failed to change their policies.
The West Indies are due to play the first match of their South
African tour in Soweto today, after arriving in Johannesburg with
an apology for delaying the start of the tour.
Brian Lara, reinstated as captain after his sacking last
Wednesday, said: "We are sorry if we caused offence and we
apologise to the people of South Africa for the delay.
"These things happen in sport. We hope that people will
understand the situation. No one wants to start a tour that's
supposed to start on the 2nd or 3rd of November, to start on the
10th of November, and I think all the parties regret that
situation."
Their arrival signalled the end of six days of disruption,
culminating in two days of discussion between the West Indies
Players' Association and the West Indies board at a hotel near
Heathrow.
Barrie Gill, one of the negotiators attempting to bring West
Indies cricket on to a more "professional" level during a
fraught, unpredictable weekend, said: "There was a lack of
understanding, and the players have gone, but if promises that
were made at that meeting aren't kept, this was only the first
skirmish, in my opinion.
"The board must realise the players have gone with a genuine wish
to help West Indies cricket, and the board must now play their
part."
Gill, of CSS International, the London-based event marketing
firm, became involved last Friday and helped to assemble a
12-point plan of promises from the board, including more open
accountability, better playing fee structures, comprehensive
insurance and, generally, a more professional attitude.
Gill said that Lara had called him, asking him to try to resolve
the crisis that had threatened the tour, requesting the presence
of a lawyer and a mediator.
Gill said: "We look after Team England, the England football
team, and we're used to representing players in dealing with an
official body. At 3.50 pm on Friday we had to find lawyers
prepared to come to a meeting. To their credit, Richard Verrow
and Alan Burdon-Cooper, of Collyer Bristow, came straight round
to my office and we all jumped into a cab and headed off for the
Excelsior Hotel, where we sat for five hours in bedroom 4912,
Brian Lara's.
"We just asked the players to explain patiently what they were
upset about. They just felt that West Indies cricket was going
nowhere, that West Indies cricket had not kept up with the
professionalism of the other leading cricket nations.
"They had now formed a player's association and they realised the
board had no money, but none of them had signed a contract for
South Africa. They wanted to look at insurance, retainers,
communication - they'd like someone on the executive board - and
they just went through a whole list of things they thought would
improve the lot of not themselves but future cricketers, to get
the act together for the future.
"They kept saying again and again 'We've got to get things right
for the future of West Indies cricket' because a lot of money was
lost when the England Test in Jamaica was cancelled because of
the pitch, and the board don't get the sort of sponsorship other
countries get."
A confidentiality clause, covering all the negotiators, prevented
Gill from disclosing details of the talks with the board, which
lasted almost two days. The first day's meeting at the Radisson
Edwardian Hotel did not break up until 4 am on Monday morning.
Gill said: "We talked and talked and couldn't get anywhere. There
was intransigence and a total failure to understand what the
players really wanted. This was not a case of employees on
strike, these were professional sportsmen wanting to raise
standards of their game, obviously their pay, security and plans
for the future. The players believed that never again would they
all be together with such unity, where they could sit down and
plan everything as a unit. They were 100 per cent behind Lara and
Carl Hooper."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)