
 
		Sobers: Cricketing  IPL cricket 
 conditions not  
 By Azad Ali 
 Cricket West Indies (CWI) says the  
 current delay in payments to regional  
 cricketers is one of the outstanding collections. 
 The international men players have  
 not been paid their match fees for the  
 home series against Ireland in January  
 (three ODIs and three Tests and three  
 T20s) and the Sri Lanka tour in February 
 March (three ODIs and two T20s). 
 The international women are owed  
 their match fees for the four matches  
 they played in the T20 World Cup,  
 played in February and-March in Australia. 
 CWI  Vice-President,  Dr.  Kishore  
 Shallow in an interview with Guardian  
 Media Sports said: Considering the  
 current circumstances of the COVID-19  
 Caribbean L 28     ife, May 1-7, 2020 
 Garfi eld Sobers (R) with his former WI teammate Wesley  
 Hall, in later days.   Photo by George Alleyne 
 pandemic, CWI is fortunate to be able  
 to mitigate the challenges and sustain  
 payroll up to this point. 
 “While we have outstanding match  
 fees for players, which would be honored  
 soon as we have sufficient collections  
 over the past few weeks, we are  
 pleased that all retainers for players  
 (which is the majority of remuneration)  
 are up to date, as March 2020,” he said. 
 He added: “We have been able to pay  
 our staff at the secretariat and I held a  
 meeting with CEO Johnny Grave and he  
 has  indicated  that  come  to  the  end  of  
 June we should be in a better position to  
 pay all those who are still owed.” 
 Cricket West Indies Vice President,  
 Dr. Kishore Shallow.   Cricket West Indies 
 By George Alleyne 
 A favorite past time of cricket fans is  
 ruminating on  comparative abilities of  
 players who took the field in different  
 eras, such as: ‘was Brian Lara a better  
 stroke maker than Vivian Richards’;  
 ‘was  Malcolm  Marshall  a  more  penetrating  
 bowler than Dennis Lillee’? 
 But the man hailed as the greatest  
 all-rounder the sport has ever seen Garfield  
 Sobers, has said that these types of  
 comparisons make no sense principally  
 because the game has changed very  
 much over eras with players facing different  
 challenges and conditions of play  
 as time went by. 
 “I don’t think you could make a comparison  
 between the past players and  
 the present because they are different  
 games that they are playing, but it is  
 their game,” the 83-year-old told Barbados  
 Nation newspaper Tuesday. 
 “There are so many things that have  
 changed  in  this  game  that  they  are  
 playing now. Whether it is a Test match,  
 a Twenty20, or whatever it is, there are a  
 lot of different rules that have been put  
 in the game.” 
 “It is very difficult to talk about the  
 two games together. It is very difficult  
 to make comparisons and to class  
 people, who are the greatest and best  
 players and who played well. You can’t  
 because  there  
 are two completely  
 different  
 games,” he  
 contended. 
 “It  is  not  
 the  same  in  
 comparison to  
 the game that  
 I played … in  
 the past. You  
 got  the  IPL  
 Indian Premier  
 League  
 T20 and then  
 you got a different  
 game  
 complet ely.  
 You got a game now where the bowlers  
 don’t set the field. The rules set  
 the fields because the rules tell you,  
 you can only have two fielders behind  
 square, you could only have a player  
 here and you can only bowl two bouncers  
 an over,” he noted. 
 Sobers  who  played  for  the  West  
 Indies from age 17, between 1954 and  
 1974, accumulated 8,032 runs, took  
 235 wickets and made 109 catches in 93  
 matches, pointed out two new playing  
 conditions that differentiate the modern  
 game from the past. 
 “You got a mask helmet now that  
 they use on the face. 
 “You have the front-foot rule, where  
 your front foot can’t go over the batting  
 crease. 
 “So for God’s sake, don’t make the  
 comparisons  between  the  players  of  
 today  and  the  players  of  yesteryear  
 because there is no comparison,” he  
 advised cricket fans. 
 “It is not the same in comparison to  
 the game that I played and my comrades  
 who played with me like Wes Hall and  
 before me, or Everton Weekes and  
 Clyde Walcott, or a lot of those fellows  
 in the past.” 
 Continued from Page 27  
 After the lockdown was extended  
 until at least May 3, the Board of  
 Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)  
 officials held a teleconference before  
 informing the franchise about further  
 delay. 
 BCCI  is  yet  to  make  an  official  
 announcement  on  the  postponement. 
 BCCI  President,  Sourav  Ganguly  
 had earlier acknowledged the difficulty  
 in hosting the tournament  
 amid  the  lockdown  with  travel  and  
 other restrictions due to the global  
 health crisis. 
 The uncertainty around this year’s  
 edition of the IPL is a big setback, particularly  
 for the 62 cricketers bought  
 for a collective US$18.34 million at  
 the players auction last December. 
 Several key West Indies players are  
 among the 62 cricketers who were  
 bought in the auction. 
 the PCB would feel the pinch if these  
 boards are unable to receive the usual  
 distributions from the International  
 Cricket Council. 
 The ICC, which distributes profit  
 from its tournaments among member  
 countries, is working on contingency  
 plans but expects the World  
 Cup to go on as scheduled. 
 West Indies is among several other  
 cricketing nations which are expected  
 to participate in the Twenty20  
 World Cup. 
 Mani, who chairs ICC’s Finance  
 and Commercial Affairs committee,  
 said the PCB was preparing for the  
 worst. 
 The PCB will also be signing a new  
 TV rights deal this year. 
 The  absence  of  bilateral  series  
 against  India,  because  of  soured  
 political relations between the two  
 neighbors, would hurt but Mani said  
 there was not much PCB could do  
 about it. 
 2,344 runs at CPL — played for Tallawhs  
 in the first four seasons of the CPL in 2013  
 and their second triumph in 2017, before  
 captaining the St. Kiss and Nevis Patriots  
 for two years. He rejoined the Tallawhs  
 in 2019. 
 Commenting on Gayle joining his  
 squad, Sammy said, “Chris is one of the  
 most successful T20 batsmen in the world  
 and with his experience with our young  
 openers, a lot can be learnt from Chris.” 
 Continued from Page 27  
 Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB)  
 Chairman Eshan Mani.   Associated  
 Press / Gurinder Osan 
 Continued from Page 27  
 Jamaican Chris Gayle joins St. Lucia Zouks 
 Revenue loss 
 the same 
 Windies players still await their match fees