 PRESIDENT OF the  Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) Brian Lewis has called for  greater accountability for sporting administrators, in light of last  Friday’s controversial Twitter incident involving West Indies Cricket  Board (WICB) president Whycliffe “Dave” Cameron and veteran opening  batsman Christopher Gayle.
PRESIDENT OF the  Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee (TTOC) Brian Lewis has called for  greater accountability for sporting administrators, in light of last  Friday’s controversial Twitter incident involving West Indies Cricket  Board (WICB) president Whycliffe “Dave” Cameron and veteran opening  batsman Christopher Gayle.
Cameron retweeted a  post by a fan calling for Gayle to retire in light of his struggles in  One Day Internationals (ODI), but Gayle responded emphatically tuesday  with a record innings of 215 against Zimbabwe in the ICC Cricket World  Cup. 
 
In a telephone interview on tuesday, Lewis admitted, “I was a little  surprised that he would have re-tweeted something that could have been  inferred as a derogatory or a negative statement about Christopher  Gayle. Everybody makes their own choices, but that is not something I  would have considered prudent to do, given the fact that he’s the  president of the West Indies Cricket Board. I felt that he had a greater  duty and responsibility to adopt a different approach.” 
 
Cameron’s action received condemnation on social media, and a number  of leading cricketing names, including commentator Tony Cozier, former  fast bowling great Michael Holding and former boss of the West Indies  Players Association (WIPA) Dinanath Ramnarine. 
 
“It is a well-established principle that you praise in public but  you chastise in private,” said Lewis. “I don’t think this was something  that would have been helpful. And I think the end result proved that. It  was perceived negatively by former players, commentators and the  public, and it highlights the challenges and dangers of social media. 
 
“What is happening with the West Indies Cricket Board, especially  with the looming elections on the 7th of March, has raised the scrutiny  on the Board,” he added. “When such scrutiny is intensified, as sports  leaders, we are held to a higher standard.” 
 
On the issue of accountability by sporting administrators, Lewis  made it clear that, “in everything in leadership, the ultimate  accountability is the stakeholders. Mr Cameron was held accountable on  social media by the anger and the disgust which his re-tweet was  received.” 
 
And Lewis slammed the WICB for their role in the entire Twitter  scenario. “The bigger issue, I think, is the heightened scrutiny,  justifiably so, in terms of the governance and the governance structure  of the West Indies Cricket Board,” he said. “As one of the major and  leading sports organisations in the region, the West Indies Cricket  Board has been found wanting.” 
 
Lewis stressed, “the stakeholders, in the context of West Indies  cricket, must be the players. People don’t play to see the  administrators, they play to see the players. In terms of the commercial  opportunities that will build the brand of West Indies cricket, is the  players. Therefore the West Indies Cricket Board must see themselves as  being accountable to the stakeholders, including the players. It makes  no sense trying to sweep the matter under the carpet. 
 
He continued, “while I’m very sympathetic for the challenges that  sports administrators in the region face in their respective  territories, it doesn’t take away from the fact that we are held to a  higher standard.” 
 
Lewis noted that Cameron must take the blame for the perceived  souring of relations between the WICB and the players, in light of the  retweet issue. 
 
“Given some of the challenges that the West Indies Cricket Board  have found (themselves) in, the buck stops with the president. We  cannot, as leaders, hold ourselves as exemplars if we don’t have the  sense of responsibility, obligation and duty to be accountable for  things that aren’t going right. The Board are more than happy to hold  the players accountable and, therefore, whether unintentional or not, is  being practised is double standard.” 
 
On Gayle’s record-breaking World Cup innings yesterday, Lewis said,  “credit must be given to Gayle in particular because he had to deal with  an obvious slap of the face from his president. He also had to deal  with a letter pertaining to a disciplinary matter. 
 
“Not withstanding all of that, he proved the well-standing sporting  adage that form is temporary and class is permanent, and the best  revenge (amounts to) success. What he did was responded, like the true  champion that he is.”
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