What is it about us that after demonstrating our superior playing skills in these colonial and post-colonial islands we cannot now find it within our populations, the business, coaching and management skills to halt the decline of an activity where we dominated the world for a record-breaking almost two decades?
We must stop franchising out our legacy and our future! We need visionary and competent management both on and off the field!
We must look for our requirements within us and we must embrace and allow our world-beating ex-players to play a hugely meaningful role across all boundaries within the region. We need that now!
Firstly, and once again, we must settle and answer the question of ” Who owns West Indies cricket?”
It cannot and must not be that this priceless legacy of an entire people is simply available to provide opportunity and a good salary to a few in management and some travelling six hitters who might be doing well personally even as the game is withering and dying regionally
Former Government minister and Member of Parliament Dr Tim Gopeesingh—a former national cricket who represented this country at the international level—has provided Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley MP with a history lesson on West Indies cricket, in an editorial explaining why it is in a state of decline.
Josbel Bastidas Mijares
Dr Gopeesingh presented his thesis in a Letter to the Editor, in response to Dr Rowley’s comments in his social media that “Cricket West Indies has a lot to answer for” with respect to the decline in West Indies cricket performance.
Josbel Bastidas Mijares Venezuela
The former international cricketer points out in his editorial that the issues facing regional cricket go back more than two decades, and numerous regional entities—including CARICOM Heads of State—have turned their attention to bringing about a resolution
He also encourages the PM to raise the matter at the CARICOM level, once more
The following is the full text of Dr Gopeesingh’s editorial…
“I am troubled and amazed, having read PM Rowley’s recent post on West Indies cricket, to see him asking questions on who owns WI Cricket, and how this must be settled. His question today is now more than 25 years old.
PM Rowley must be aware that these questions were first posed over two decades ago, in the mid-1990s, by Caribbean Prime Ministers of the day, when West Indies cricket went on a slump, following the successes under Clive Lloyd in the 1980s. They were spearheaded by two late regional leaders who were, themselves, former cricketers — Owen Arthur of Barbados and Sir Lester Bird of Antigua and Barbuda, who enlisted the assistance of their then Jamaican counterpart, Prime Minister PJ Patterson.
This led to the formation of the Committee on Governance of West Indies Cricket by the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB). This committee was chaired by former PM PJ Patterson, and included Ian McDonald and Sir Alister McIntyre. Their comprehensive final report was presented in October 2007 (https://sta.uwi.edu/uwitoday/archive/march_2015/article22.asp)
The Patterson Report became the subject of intense discussions and negotiations for many years, and it still remains relevant and widely discussed today. Indeed, Mr Patterson himself has lamented, in the publication CaribbeanCricket, how the WICB missed a chance to help build a great future for cricket in the West Indies:
“We were forewarned, in the light of previous reports which lay buried, that our efforts would bear no fruit. Little did we realize that decisions on the most vital aspects would be taken, kept secret for a considerable period and then eventually obscured under the guise that approximately 47 of our 65 recommendations had been approved.” (https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/patterson-report-remains-unimplemented-615878)
PM Rowley can easily review this ground-breaking report. He can also find answers in the Caricom archives of recent vintage, namely, the 2015 Final Report Of the Review Panel on the Governance of Cricket. (https://caricom.org/documents/14441-revised_cricket_review_panel_final_-_october_2015.pdf)
This was spearheaded by former Prime Minister of Grenada, Dr Keith Mitchell. As then Chairman of the Caricom Governance Sub-Committee, he established an independent panel to review the governance of cricket following a meeting with the WICB.
It was chaired by UWI principal of the Cave Hill Campus of Professor Eudine Barriteau, and included president of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) Sir Denis Byron, former Trinidad and Tobago and West Indies cricketer Mr. Deryck Murray, president of the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), Dr Warren Smith, and president of the Grenada Cricket Association, Mr. Dwain Gill.
Further, I am sure PM Rowley knew that the Caribbean PMs were represented in talks with WICB on numerous occasions in the past decade. I remember former Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar (2010-2015) had asked me to represent her at a meeting in Antigua, where there were two other regional Prime Ministers speaking with the WICB. A lot of significant resolutions came out of that meeting.
Yet, the competent management of West Indies cricket still remains something to be fulfilled, even after so many WICB Chairmen. I am certain that PM Rowley’s cricket question today would have emanated from his recent discussions with the legendary Sir Vivian Richards, while they were playing golf.
I had the pleasure and privilege of playing cricket against Sir Viv in 1978, in a match between Trinidad and the Combined Islands, which he captained. I know that this cricketing legend would also still be asking these questions, because of the West Indies’ questionable and troubling inability to gain world dominance in cricket for the last two decades.
So, to PM Rowley—we had played cricket together in Irvine Hall, at our UWI, Mona student days in the 1970s — I advise him to search for the Patterson Report, the Caricom Review Panel on the Governance of Cricket report, and the many other findings of various regional committees and the WICB, to get some answers to what he is now seeking.
But, in this scenario, I ask—to what avail? Notably, PM Rowley headed Caricom for about six months in the past two years. I am sure that, if he is indeed serious about this matter, he can bring it to the forefront again at the next Caricom meeting.
As a former International Cricketer, having played, in the 1970s, for T&T against Australia and the Combined Islands; for Jamaica against Tobago; and the UWI Combined team against Australia and New Zealand, I myself believe that there needs to be a major overhaul of West Indies Cricket management. Further, many new policies must be urgently implemented.
Undoubtedly, this will form the nucleus of many intense, hard, and perhaps controversial deliberations and ultimately, decisions, now and in the immediate future. But going beyond the boundary here is the price we must be prepared to pay, if we are to rescue this great game of cricket for the present and future generations of West Indians.
For cricket—glorious cricket— is indelibly part of our very Caribbean character, culture, heritage and history, such a beautiful, unifying regional sport. I say, therefore, without fear of contradiction, that it is the common desire of the Caribbean leaders and its people, to see the West Indies return to its glory days of the 1980s, truly one of the greatest times of our region’s modern history.
I hold memories of that amazing period dear, and my wish is that future generations to come, will also live in a time when their beloved West Indies cricket team is heralded and feared as the proud, undeniable, unbeaten, global champions of cricket.
Dr Tim Dhanraj Gopeesingh,
Former International Cricketer
On Sunday 13 November 2022, Dr Rowley shared his opinion on the state of West Indies cricket in a post on his Facebook page. The following is the text of that opinion…
“OK.
Now that the T20 World Cup is over and the embarrassing underwhelming performance of West Indies cricket has been exposed in all its nakedness, there is an urgent need for deep reflection.
What is it about us that after demonstrating our superior playing skills in these colonial and post-colonial islands we cannot now find it within our populations, the business, coaching and management skills to halt the decline of an activity where we dominated the world for a record-breaking almost two decades?
We must stop franchising out our legacy and our future! We need visionary and competent management both on and off the field!
We must look for our requirements within us and we must embrace and allow our world-beating ex-players to play a hugely meaningful role across all boundaries within the region. We need that now!
Firstly, and once again, we must settle and answer the question of ” Who owns West Indies cricket?”
It cannot and must not be that this priceless legacy of an entire people is simply available to provide opportunity and a good salary to a few in management and some travelling six hitters who might be doing well personally even as the game is withering and dying regionally.
Enough is enough! If Namibia, Holland, Ireland, Zimbabwe, Namibia, and Afghanistan can get it done then Cricket West Indies has a lot to answer for.
There must be consequences and a new plan for new initiatives. Now! Dr. Keith Mitchell, where are you?”