West Indies: Players Sticking Together, Public Reaction Mixed (5 November 1998)
Roland Holder says the players are in solidarity
05-Nov-1998
5 November 1998
West Indies: Players Sticking Together, Public Reaction Mixed
by Haydn Gill
Roland Holder says the players are in solidarity.
Courtney Walsh is surprised.
And the results of a television poll in Trinidad last night
favoured the West Indies Cricket Board's (WIBC) decision to
withdraw captain Brian Lara and Carl Hooper from the forthcoming
tour of South Africa.
Those were just a few of the reactions to the WICB's decision
against the two players who had ignored team management's
decision not to return to London after participating in the
Wills Cup which ended in Bangladesh Sunday.
In a random poll on the government-owned Trinidad and Tobago
Television (TTT) moments after the decisions were announced by
WICB president Pat Rousseau, 55 per cent of those interviewed
supported the ruling to strip Lara and Hooper of their titles
and rule them out of the series.
A poll on another Trinidadian station, TV 6, showed more support
for the players, while the Guardian newspaper is urging
Caribbean governments to intervene in the matter.
Holder, who along with David Holford, represented the West
Indies Players Association (WIPA) at an emergency meeting at the
Rex Halcyon Hotel here yesterday, said the players were united
in their position.
"They have expressed a position of solidarity. We are looking at
what options are open to us," he said on his return to Barbados
last night.
"The players have the interest of West Indies cricket at heart
and have always been and will remain committed to West Indies
cricket."
Courtney Walsh, who along with Curtly Ambrose and Jimmy Adams
were fined 10 per cent of their tour fees for also remaining in
London, was hopeful that everything could be resolved.
"I am surprised to hear some of the things that have happened.
At this point in time I have been advised to say nothing," WIPA
president Walsh said from London.
"We have to come together, discuss and decide what we think is
best for us players and the association.
"We regard the WIPA as a body that is looking after us and we
have got to discuss how best to deal with the issues at hand."
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)