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13 Oct 2016 21:32 #324040
by TRINIDADDY
He's a good commentator. Today Faz was namedropping Pakistani batsmen from the 1920s that nobody else in the box had heard of. He knows his cricket.
He's mostly hated, by some, because he rightly says stuff like this:
"IF DAVE CAMERON represents the lowest of the low when it comes to the administration of West Indies cricket, then the former officials now calling for the regional game to be rescued from his clutches need to first acknowledge their own roles in the protracted downward spiral that has brought us to this point.
[...] The five making the case for a forensic audit of the organisation and the more strident intervention of Caricom, were key functionaries in a system defined by aloofness and a lack of transparency. Can any one of former presidents Pat Rousseau and Ken Gordon, former CEO Bruce Aanensen, former corporate secretary Tony Deyal, and former communications manager Imran Khan seriously claim to have contributed in any tangible way to a board that was more accountable to the people of the Caribbean?
Can anyone ever recall a period when the WICB operated in a manner that appeared to be responsive to the will of the fans or enjoyed the unqualified trust and confidence of the players?
From the start of Rousseau’s tenure at the helm of the regional body in 1996 to the end of Khan’s time in office just prior to the general elections in Guyana in May of last year, was there any time at all when the WICB’s governance reflected the perspective that “West Indies cricket belongs to the people of the West Indies, not the WICBâ€, as Gordon stated in part of his contribution to Thursday’s joint communiqué?
Even if there is ample justification for a forensic audit to ensure that all revenues coming into the WICB have been properly accounted for, these individuals all stand accused of collective and convenient blindness if they are suggesting that the WICB operated as a fully transparent organisation during their time in office.
This is by no means intended to question the honesty and integrity of the individuals making this latest plea for some sort of rescue effort for West Indies cricket via the reining in of the present administration.
Still, the question has to be asked: what did any one of them do to change the corporate culture of secrecy at the WICB?
Gordon, who served a single term as WICB president in 2007 and 2008, says “We need to lift the clouded veil which now surrounds that body. Answers are required and this can be a first step to return to the transparency required of a body which is a major beneficiary of regional resources and private sponsorship.â€
When was there not a veil of secrecy enveloping the WICB? Exhortations for a return to transparency presume that such a time actually existed previously. When was that?
Even in the era of unprecedented West Indian dominance of world cricket from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s, the administrative style of the WICB, although just a comparatively skeletal operation, faced repeated accusations of arrogance and indifference towards Caribbean people and Caribbean leaders.
Speaking of the heads of Caricom, it is already blindingly clear that there is no chance of a unified position by the region’s key politicians in taking any form of strident action to break the stranglehold of the WICB. So Wilkin’s repeating of the suggestion that Caricom governments should “refuse permission for use of the stadia and refuse them access to regional cricket grounds†rings hollow in the context of the failure of the umbrella political organisation even to achieve unanimity on last year’s fundamental recommendation by the Barriteau committee for a disbanding of the existing management structure at the board.
In essence, West Indian disunity over cricket matters insulates the West Indies Cricket Board from any sort of meaningful challenge to its authority." - Faz
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14 Oct 2016 09:16 - 14 Oct 2016 09:27 #324045
by ketchim
369 - 2 after 114
Azhar Ali 181*
108.3
Bishoo to Asad Shafiq, OUT, tossed up and outside off, Shafiq skips out, but the ball
dips, creating distance between the bat and the pitch. Forces him to check his drive and simply chip it back to Bishoo, waist-high catch
Asad Shafiq
c & b Bishoo 67
Last edit: 14 Oct 2016 09:27 by
ketchim.
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14 Oct 2016 09:44 #324050
by ketchim
194*
TEA, day 2
Azhar is clapped off by his team-mates. He's six short of his second double-century.
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14 Oct 2016 10:00 #324052
by ketchim
whaddabout it ? :-\
On 184*
115.4
Chase to Azhar Ali, Dropped. The batsman has a crooked poke and nicks it.
Blackwood at lone slip dives to his right, attempts the catch with both hands,
but it bobbles out .............Azhar sinks to his knees !
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14 Oct 2016 10:06 #324053
by ketchim
120.1
Gabriel to Azhar, FOUR, tripe ball down the leg side, even butchers don't feed these
to cattle. Azhar just tickled it fine past the keeper to skip to 198*
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14 Oct 2016 10:07 #324054
by ketchim
120.2
Gabriel to Azhar Ali, FOUR, Ladies and gentlemen,
Azhar Ali becomes the first player to make a double-century
in Day-Night Test cricket.
He celebrates the landmarks with press-ups
followed by the sajdah !
.
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