West Indies: Cricket Board, Players Face Off Today (4 November 1998)
The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indies Players' Association (WIPA) last night remained, literally and figuratively, an ocean apart
04-Nov-1998
4 November 1998
West Indies: Cricket Board, Players Face Off Today
by Tony Cozier
The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indies Players'
Association (WIPA) last night remained, literally and figuratively, an
ocean apart.
The impasse over fees and conditions threatens the imminent tour of
South Africa and the very structure of West Indies cricket itself.
While nine of the players picked for the tour, including captain Brian
Lara and vice-captain Carl Hooper, remained in the Excelsior Hotel at
London's Heathrow Airport instead of heading for Johannesburg as
planned, the WICB was going ahead with a previously announced full
meeting at its headquarters in Antigua this morning to discuss the
matter.
The WICB had asked Lara and Hooper to attend the meeting, to which the
Players' Association responded with an invitation for the WICB to come
to London to meet with its president, Courtney Walsh, vice-president
Lara, treasurer Jimmy Adams, and Hooper. Both sides refused the
other's suggestion.
Chief executive David Holford said last night he and secretary Roland
Holder, the Barbados and West Indies batsman, would fly to Antigua
today to represent the WIPA at the meeting.
The WICB said in a Press statement Monday night that Lara and Hooper
had disregarded the instructions from team manager Clive Lloyd to head
to South Africa as scheduled. Instead, they flew into London yesterday
from Dhaka, where the West Indies completed the Wills International
Cup on Sunday.
They were joined by Walsh, Adams, Curtly Ambrose, Darren Ganga, Junior
Murray, Dinanath Ramnarine and Franklyn Rose, who were not on the team
in Dhaka and were scheduled to stop in London on the way to
Johannesburg.
The remaining players in Dhaka - Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Mervin
Dillon, Ridley Jacobs, Clayton Lambert, Nixon McLean, Philo Wallace
and Stuart Williams - all reportedly left with Lloyd and coach Malcolm
Marshall for South Africa yesterday.
In a Press statement, Holford said the board had accepted its terms
over fees. But he added that "there are issues surrounding the
agreement with which the Players' Association is not in agreement".
He called Press reports that Lara and Hooper had abandoned the tour
"unfounded and untrue", and said the players "wish to reaffirm their
total commitment to West Indies' cricket and their eagerness" to take
part in the South African series.
The players for South Africa are reportedly asking for payment above
their tour fee for a one-week camp to be held prior to the start of
the South African tour on November 10, for increased meal allowances
and for the guarantee of security in Johannesburg, where two Pakistani
players were mugged while on tour last year.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)