 HYPOCRISY. This was  how former West Indies Players Association (WIPA) president Dinanath  Ramnarine yesterday described the recent nominations of Joel Garner and  Baldath Mahabir for the posts of president and vice-president  respectively, in the wake of forthcoming West Indies Cricket Board  (WICB) elections next month.
HYPOCRISY. This was  how former West Indies Players Association (WIPA) president Dinanath  Ramnarine yesterday described the recent nominations of Joel Garner and  Baldath Mahabir for the posts of president and vice-president  respectively, in the wake of forthcoming West Indies Cricket Board  (WICB) elections next month.
Ramnarine thinks  that these nominations should be openly rejected by the Caribbean’s  cricketing bodies as he feels the pair failed to distinguish themselves  as WICB Directors and must share the blame for the decline of Windies  cricket due to the poor functioning of the regional governing body. He  said the most recent administrative scandal was the players’ strike of  the India Tour (October, 2014) and a looming US$42 million bill from the  Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). 
 
According to the former national cricketer, Garner and Mahabir are  WICB members and together had a part to play in the events leading up to  the players’ strike in India. Following the team’s actions in October,  the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB) executive committee also  threw their support behind the WICB, unequivocally condemning the  players for their actions on tour in a resolution. 
 
However, recent newspaper reports during the past week indicated  that the TTCB executive met on Tuesday and “deliberated long and hard  over the events that took place recently in West Indies cricket and it  was decided that too many mistakes were made concerning the aborted  Indian tour and that Cameron and Nanton had to be held accountable.” 
 
Responding to these recent happenings, Ramnarine explained, “it’s  wrong and hypocritical for them (Garner, Mahabir) to come across like  this (for nomination) now. Because they are now distancing themselves  from Cameron and Nanton due to how they handled the situation with the  BCCI in an improper way. 
 
“I sat down with Azim Bassarath, Baldath Mahabir, Manohar Ramsaran  and all the people within the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board and they  condemned the players without even understanding the other side and  accepted no responsibility whatsoever. Because the question was raised,  whether the WICB was at fault at all, and they didn’t think so.” The  former national and West Indies leg-break bowler believes the entire  WICB committee disqualified themselves on the basis of their performance  and how they have run regional cricket during their tenure.  
 
“They have proven to be unsuitable for these leadership positions  because collectively and individually they have demonstrated that they  are incapable of defending West Indies cricket. If fact, what they have  done is taken the sport 20 years back. What is the sense putting the  same people to do the same thing and expect a different result?”  Ramnarine questioned. 
 
Asked what may be a possible solution to this fiasco, Ramnarine  called for good governance of all regional cricketing boards, starting  with the WICB and into other Caribbean bodies. 
 
“It comes down to the governance of cricket and it comes back to the  root cause which are the territorial boards. Territorial boards do not  have a proper governance structure. For example, the TTCB has 12  outgoing votes. Twelve people do not put themselves up to be elected  when they have an outgoing vote. That is 50 percent of the votes that  you need to win any election. 
 
“This shows that they are supported by an undemocratic, unfair and  unconstitutional constitution that they have benefitted from and it’s  almost impossible to move the incumbents, not because you don’t want to  move them, but the constitution is set in a way that it is impossible  for them to move. It’s like asking themselves, to remove themselves,” he  added. 
 
Ramnarine also noted that the West Indies team has not been playing  up to par due to the fact that the Caribbean’s management and  administration of the sport have failed across the board. He also hailed  Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) president Brian Lewis who  recently reiterated the significance of good and transparent governance. 
 
He concluded, “from my understanding, the BCCI is going to deal with  Cameron because he upset them in a tremendous way. I don’t think that  Garner and Mahabir have the negotiating skills to bring the WICB out of  this. These guys have been around for a long time now and what do they  have to show for this time? 
 
“Regional cricket is going in the opposite direction. The TTCB  supported it and it is absolutely hypocritical to come now and try to  distance themselves in pursuit of power.  
 
“The other regional cricket boards should take note, distance  themselves and reject all four of them (Cameron, Nanton, Garner and  Mahabir).” 
 
Efforts to contact Bassarath and Mahabir yesterday proved futile.
