West Indies make last-ditch appeal to five-star rebels who snubbed Mandela (8 November 1998)
ONE of the most important tours in cricket history was still in the balance last night as the West Indies Cricket Board prepared to play their last card at the end of a week of high drama and near farce, all centred on two anonymous business hotels
08-Nov-1998
8 November 1998
West Indies make last-ditch appeal to five-star rebels who snubbed Mandela
By Paul Newman in London and James Mossop in Johannesburg
ONE of the most important tours in cricket history was still in
the balance last night as the West Indies Cricket Board prepared
to play their last card at the end of a week of high drama and
near farce, all centred on two anonymous business hotels
alongside Heathrow Airport.
Pat Rousseau, the under-fire president of the board, will arrive
in London today with two colleagues in a final, desperate attempt
to save the West Indies' first official tour of South Africa, his
presence an unavoidable gamble as all else, even the intervention
of Nelson Mandela, has failed to solve what has developed into
the biggest crisis the game has seen since the Packer affair 20
years ago.
The pay dispute, on the surface over a few pounds but much more
complex than that, began with a heated argument between the West
Indian players and officials while in transit at Bangkok on their
way from Bangladesh to Johannesburg and has reached an impasse
with the whole tour party setting up camp in the unlikely setting
of the Excelsior Hotel, Heathrow. Rebel cricketers used to get
into trouble for visiting South Africa. This time the rebels have
decided to stay away from the republic.
All seemed well last Sunday when the West Indies had proved
themselves an improving one-day force by finishing runners-up to,
coincidentally, South Africa in the ICC tournament in Dhaka. Yet
their preparations to leave Bangladesh for a South African tour
deep in cultural significance was simply the lull before a
particularly unpleasant storm. Plotting had been going on behind
the scenes throughout the competition.
Brian Lara and Carl Hooper, their batting genius matched only by
their capacity for controversy, sparked off the trouble. They
told their team-mates, in the departure lounge amid the heat and
bussle of Bangkok International Airport on Tuesday, of their
intentions to meet up in London with the seven members of the
tour party who had not been on duty in Bangladesh - among them
Courtney Walsh. Lara had already telephoned Walsh to tell the
seven to stay in London and not go to South Africa as planned.
It did not take long for sparks to fly, the players exchanging
angry words with Clive Lloyd, now the tour manager but, with a
rich irony, a leading figure in the Packer dispute as a player
seeking more money. Times have changed. Lloyd's pleas for his
captain and vice-captain to remain with the team fell on deaf
ears; Lara and Hooper insisted that they were representing the
whole team and eventually joined up on Wednesday with Walsh and
Co at Heathrow, the group all booking into the Excelsior under
the name of GB Sports, their travel agents.
By the time Lara and Hooper arrived, they had been sacked from
the party, their dismissals being confirmed in faxes to the
Excelsior from Steve Camacho, the chief executive of a furious
West Indies board, who were in emergency session in Antigua. The
board's patience had finally run out with the two errant stars
and, for good measure, they fined the other players in London 10
per cent of their tour fees. Senior players will earn around
£32,000 basic for the trip, with junior members of the party
receiving £23,000.
Now Lara took a back seat in the affair, saying: "I'm on the
outside. I'm not a member of the West Indies cricket team at the
moment. But I still want to go to South Africa". With that, he
departed the Excelsior and has not been seen in public since, his
Test career hanging by a thread.
Attention switched to Walsh, the hugely-respected former captain
and now president of the West Indies Players' Association and the
man replaced controversially by Lara at the helm before England's
tour earlier this year. Now Lara's actions had forced him back
into the spotlight again.
Walsh, who is on the brink of breaking Malcolm Marshall's West
Indies Test wickets record, spent much of Thursday on the phone
from room 4902, a luxury suite at the Excelsior, locked in
largely unsuccessful talks with his fellow Jamaican Rousseau, who
was in Kingston, and Camacho, who was still in Antigua. The rest
of the team passed time as best they could, anxious to avoid the
growing media circus in the spacious lobby until the first
element of farce kicked in later that day.
Two players decided to brave the throng and visit the hotel shop
to buy seven blackcurrant drinks for their group. Junior Murray
was easily recognisable but his tall companion was harder to
place - he was wearing a monster mask to poke fun at the
developing siege mentality.
"Is that you Courtney," he was asked. "No." "Curtly?" "No!" It's
Franklyn, isn't it?" "Yes," confirmed Franklyn Rose, of Jamaica
and latterly Northamptonshire, going on to say that all he wanted
to do was play cricket but refusing to comment when asked if
everyone was behind Lara. Each question was met with a serious
response. And all the time he continued to wear his mask . . .
The mood was very different in South Africa, where a tour worth
an estimated £4 million to the host nation's United Cricket Board
and much more in terms of promoting the game to black youngsters
was suddenly in jeopardy.
On Sunday a welcoming party led by UCB managing director Dr Ali
Bacher and former West Indian Test player Conrad Hunte, who has
done so much to promote the game in South Africa to the
under-privileged, went to Johannesburg Airport to welcome the
first group of players who were coming in from the Caribbean via
London. They waited and no cricketers appeared.
By Tuesday, nervousness began to grip Bacher and his men. They
were getting telephone calls from reporters saying that Lara and
Hooper had broken away from the group and had gone to London.
Bacher put in a call to Camacho demanding to know what was
happening. Camacho said the players were disputing tour payments
they had agreed even before they went to Bangladesh. He said he
had ordered Lara and Hooper to get the first plane out of London
to Antigua. They never took it.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday, Bacher was meeting seven of the tour
party who had been playing in Bangladesh, as they arrived in
South Africa along with Lloyd and coach Marshall. They were
driven to the team hotel while Bacher, six hours ahead of the
West Indies on the international clock, waited for the WICB to
stir before putting in more calls. The press conference,
scheduled for 1pm, was cancelled. Would that be the fate of the
tour, everybody was asking.
By Thursday, the situation was getting serious. The UCB received
a call from the team's hotel to cancel the bus that was to take
these seven to net practice. They were going to London instead.
This was the day of the marathon telephone conference between
Bacher and Rousseau. Bacher and Hunte then went to meet Lloyd and
Marshall to try to persuade them to keep the Johannesburg seven
in South Africa for 48 hours. Hunte told them: "This tour is the
culmination of all my work here because everyone needs a hero, a
role model. It must go ahead.
"At the moment there is tremendous disappointment at what's going
on. I think I'm right in saying that the people of the townships
would welcome West Indies winning, even though they are South
Africans. The emotional contact is there. They will identify more
with South Africa when a couple of their own superstars emerge."
But the players in Johannesburg were adamant that they had to
stand by their colleagues in London and left for England before
Bacher and Lloyd drove together to catch the 10pm Thursday night
flight to Heathrow. The players flew with South African Airlines
to London, mixing and meeting with the Springbok rugby players,
Clayton Lambert receiving an invitation to watch the players in
action if they were still in London when they faced England. "I
hope not," smiled Lambert. "I hope to be back in South Africa by
then!"
Bacher and Lloyd, meanwhile, were travelling with British
Airways, the South African confident that he was armed with a
weapon that would bring the whole messy business to an end - 16
copies of a four-page, typed letter from Nelson Mandela for each
player, including Lara and Hooper, urging them to travel and
finishing with the paragraph: "I will look forward to the
privilege of personally meeting you on your arrival in our
country." Surely, Bacher felt, that could not fail.
And the abiding memory of the whole affair so far is of the most
accomplished administrator in cricket left standing, helpless, at
the hotel's reception for 65 minutes waiting to be acknowledged
by the West Indian "rebels" when he put his ace card on the
table.
Bacher, the renowned "Mr Fix-it" of the game, had just walked the
400 yards to the Excelsior from the neighbouring Radisson
Edwardian Hotel, where he had had three hours of talks with Lloyd
and Joel Garner - the latter having been diverted by the board on
his way to manage the A tour of Bangladesh to be their
representative because Garner was, in Lloyd's words, "their
biggest man" but, bizarrely, he had been given no authorisation
to negotiate.
Bacher was surrounded by cameras and notebooks but happily waved
his package aloft and waited for Walsh. But Walsh did not come.
An anxious hotel lobby manager kept on ringing Walsh's room,
returning to Bacher to report variously that he was on the phone,
not answering and that he would be down soon.
South African journalists began to get angry on their country's
behalf; one offered Bacher his hotel room so that he could avoid
the prying eyes of the media and Bacher simply replied: "It's OK.
I'm staying calm."
Batsman Stuart Williams and Rose appeared and Bacher went to
greet them, thinking they were there to see him. But they walked
straight past to reception. Walsh eventually appeared, walking
past Bacher and circling the lobby before telling the hotel
manager that he would see the South African, adding: "But tell
him to make it brief."
The pair came together, a brief handshake was followed by the
handing over of Mandela's letter and a short private meeting
between the two. South Africans were outraged by Walsh's apparent
reluctance to receive it. "West Indians show contempt for
Mandela," screamed one headline in Johannesburg yesterday. One
senior West Indies player, meanwhile, said that Bacher's move was
ill-advised, turning what should have been a genuine gesture on
Mandela's behalf into a tacky display of public emotional
blackmail.
"This dispute has been coming for a long time," added the same
player. "It's about much more than money for this tour. It's
about conditions and pay in general."
"I'm confident that the tour will go ahead. Of course it will,"
said Bacher late on Friday amid rumours of tour sponsors pulling
out and others in South Africa offering to cover the additional
sums demanded by the West Indians. "We will definitely not get
involved financially. It's up to the West Indies board and their
players. But this trip must go on. It's about so much more than
bat and ball."
But the show was not back on the road yesterday. And Bacher was
looking an increasingly agitated man at the Radisson, having to
cancel his flight back to Johannesburg last night while the West
Indies were extending their bookings at the Excelsior. "We're no
nearer settling the dispute," said Garner before Walsh emerged to
have yesterday's final word.
Reading from a prepared statement, he said: "The West Indies
cricket team are unanimous in their wish that the South African
tour takes place. They fully appreciate the importance of the
tour, both to the board and to the public of South Africa as
emphasised by the letter of Nelson Mandela.
"They are equally unanimous in their view that the tour can only
take place if the West Indies board meet here with
representatives of the players in London in order to finalise
contracts for the tour and draw up guidelines for future series.
The players stress that they have been available for such a
meeting since Tuesday, Nov 3.
"We are pleased that the president [Rousseau] is going to make an
appearance. That is good news for us. This is not just about
money. It's to do with generalised conditions, the future of West
Indies cricket and safeguarding the younger guys who are just
coming in."
He went on to confirm that Lara and Hooper must be reinstated.
"That's part of the condition," said Walsh. "We want the entire
16 the way they were selected. The boys want Brian as captain. We
are very hopeful."
Now it is over to Rousseau, who has survived some monumental
problems in West Indian cricket and is adamant that he will not
back down over Lara's re-instatement. But this is his biggest
problem yet, even bigger than the furore over the abandoned
Jamaica Test in January. And today, after Rousseau meets with the
players and their representative Jonathan Barnett, will decide
whether he can solve it. If Rousseau climbs down, he will surely
have to resign. If he stands firm, the tour will surely be off.
The stakes are high.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)