Showing posts with label selected. Show all posts
Showing posts with label selected. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

WICB president rejects victimisation claims, says team selected on merit

ST GEORGE’S, Grenada (CMC) — West Indies Cricket Board president Dave Cameron has rejected claims that all-rounders Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard were axed from the World Cup squad because of their roles in the controversial abandoned tour of India.

Neither player was named in the 15-man squad announced on Saturday to contest the World Cup which bowls off in Australia and New Zealand next month. They were also overlooked for the five-match series against South Africa starting Friday.

When the squad for South Africa was announced last month, St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves wrote to Cameron to complain that the WICB had “dishonoured that undertaking” of not punishing any player involved in the India tour walk-out.

However, Cameron remained adamant the ODI squads for both the South Africa tour and the World Cup had been selected on cricketing merit.

“We have not gone back on our agreement. At the point in time we made it very clear we didn’t want to use the terminology that was being suggested, because if you made any changes to the team then that could be termed,” Cameron told CARIB UPDATE News in a radio interview here Sunday.

“And so we have been very, very firm that as a body we have entrusted that relationship and that decision making to some of the biggest legends we have in West Indies cricket and their judgement is what the board goes by.”

The task force was established by the WICB to investigate the reasons behind the abandoned tour and make recommendations on the way forward.

Like the squad in South Africa, the World Cup unit will be skippered by rookie fast bowler Jason Holder, who featured on the tour of India last October.

The 23-year-old has played just three Tests and 21 ODIs and replaced Bravo, who took over from Darren Sammy in May, 2013.

Gonsalves, who brokered an agreement between the players, the WICB and players union WIPA in the wake of the abandoned tour, also contended in his two-page letter to Cameron that the omission of Bravo and Pollard “reeks of village vengeance, discrimination and victimisation” and slammed the decision as “glaringly (lacking) cricketing merit.”

Cameron defended the squad selection, arguing that the selectors were embarking on a rebuilding process and infusing the ODI set-up with new blood.

“The team we have selected has a very good mix of experience, youth and a lot of talent. One would remember that the team four years ago didn’t do very well in the World Cup and we are ranked number eight today, so the selectors have decided they want to put some youth and build for the future and I think it is a very good balance,” Cameron said.

Pollard and Bravo boast 255 ODIs between them, and despite their unflattering statistics with bat and ball, are powerful batsmen and steady bowlers in the shorter versions of the game.

In recent years, they have become virtual fixtures in the T20 and ODI squads, but Cameron pointed out that team building was the focus at this juncture.

“The board of selectors have appointed very eminent persons to select the West Indies team and they have selected those players based on the balance and merit etcetera, and we have accepted that team,” he said.


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WICB president rejects victimisation claims, says team selected on merit

Friday, September 6, 2013

17-member Windies women squad selected

Sport

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) — The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has announced a 17-member West Indies Women’s squad to begin preparations for a series of One-Day and Twenty20 International against England and New Zealand next month.Right-handed batter Chinelle Henry is the only uncapped player in the squad and left-handed all-rounder Stacy Ann King has been recalled after missing recent engagements.“Chinelle is a capable player and strikes the ball very nicely. We expect some good things from her in the future. She has been around the Jamaica team for a long time, but she is still very young,” said chairman of the West Indies Selection Committee Clyde Butts.“Stacy Ann showed during the Regional Women’s tournaments that she is still capable of playing at the international level and her bowling has also improved. She is also one of our best fielders, so we still feel that she has a lot to offer to the team and we can’t write her off.”The Windies Women’s training camp takes place from September 22 to 30 in Jamaica, and the final squad of 13 for the series against the New Zealanders will be chosen when it is completed.Butts said he expected that the matches against New Zealand and England will be tough, but would be critical to the development of the team.“Our team needs this sort of rivalry. We have always wanted to play against England, New Zealand and Australia more often and it will be good for them to play against such tough and skilled opponents,” he said.“To have two of the three top women’s teams playing in the Caribbean will do a lot for women’s cricket and I expect our team to be ready and able to be competitive against them.”The squad was selected following the recent Women’s Super 50 and T20 tournaments in Grenada.The 17 members are Merissa Aguilleira, Shemaine Campbell, Shanel Daley, Deandra Dottin, Chinelle Henry, Stacy Ann King, Kycia Knight, Kyshona Knight, Natasha McLean, Anisa Mohammed, Subrina Munroe, Juliana Nero, June Ogle, Shaquana Quintyne, Shakera Selman, Tremayne Smartt and Stafanie Taylor.

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17-member Windies women squad selected

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Rutherford selected for Worlds

Venue: Moscow, RussiaDate: 10-18 AugustCoverage: Live on BBC TV, BBC Radio 5 live, BBC Sport website, mobiles, tablets and Connected TVs.

Olympic champion Greg Rutherford has passed a fitness test and been selected for the World Championships in Moscow, which start on 10 August.

British Athletics announced its full squad two weeks ago but delayed naming its sole long jumper as Rutherford battled a hamstring injury.


Fellow Briton Chris Tomlinson does not have the ‘A’ qualifying standard.


Mo FarahJessica Ennis-Hill – Gold heptathlon Mo Farah - Gold 5,000m & 10,000m Robbie Grabarz - Bronze, high jump Christine Ohuruogu - Silver, 400m Greg Rutherford - Gold, long jump “Greg has shown a remarkable level of recovery,” UK Athletics performance director Neil Black said.

“Following the fitness tests and his record of being able to produce a quality performance off minimal build-up, I am pleased to confirm his place in the GB & NI team.


“He’ll continue to work closely with the support staff to maximise every additional moment in between now and 14 August.”


Rutherford and Tomlinson jointly hold the British record of 8.35m. But, because neither has achieved the ‘A’ standard of 8.25m this season, only one of the pair could be selected.


Rutherford, 26, has not been in action since pulling his right hamstring at the Diamond League meet in Paris on 6 July.


Tomlinson, 31, competed at the Anniversary Games at the Olympic Stadium in London on Sunday but managed only 7.99m.


He still felt he had done enough to be selected, saying afterwards: “I think on current form, in current shape, I’d be on the team. But obviously Greg’s got that [Olympic title] and that has to be taken into account.”


Rutherford will be hoping to compete alongside Olympic gold-medal winning team-mates Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis-Hill in Moscow.


Farah goes for the 5,000m and 10,000m double in peak form, having broken Steve Cram’s 28-year-old British record in the 1500m and won the 3,000m at the Anniversary Games, but Ennis-Hill has fitness concerns having struggled all year with an ankle problem. A decision is due to be made on Wednesday on whether she will compete in the heptathlon.


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Rutherford selected for Worlds

Friday, July 26, 2013

J"can selected as alternate candidate for ISA training programme

News

Kimone ThompsonFriday, July 26, 2013

JAMAICAN Renee McDonald has been selected by the International Seabed Authority (ISA) as an alternate candidate for a contractor training programme offered by the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources in Germany.The alternate status means she will only participate in the programme if Khaled Sinoussy Mohamed (Egypt) and Daniel Armando Pérez-Calderón (Mexico) are unable to take up the offer for any reason. The other alternate in this category is Lei Qiu of China.The selections were made last week and fulfil part of the contractual obligations under which the ISA grants entities licences to explore for minerals on the seafloor. Eight candidates were chosen from a field of 145 applications, with an equal number of alternates.Those selected for the China Ocean Mineral Resources R & D Association training programme are Dieudonne Tchokona Seuwui (Cameroon), Gerald Mwila (Zambia), Tearinaki Tanielu (Kiribati) and Analia Veronica Serra (Argentina), while the alternates are Apichai Kanchanapant (Thailand), Tiena Rongo (Cook Islands), Apitida Wasuwatcharapong (Thailand) and Robert Kibiwot (Kenya).Candidates for the Tonga Offshore Mining Limited programme are Dody Darmawan (Indonesia) and Paul Poloka (Papua New Guinea), with stand-ins Syed Waseem Haider (Pakistan) and Benjamine Titus (Vanuatu).The purpose of the obligation, the Authority said, is to ensure that personnel from developing States are provided with appropriate operational expertise to enable them to participate in deep seabed mining.More than 20 training opportunities should become available for the 2013-2015 period, the ISA added.But McDonald’s selection has again brought to the fore concerns that Jamaica is not taking advantage of the resources in the sea, and the related opportunities presented by the location of the ISA Secretariat in Kingston.Commenting on the issue, Secretary General Nii Odunton told the Jamaica Observer that the secretariat was “quite excited” to have received McDonald’s application as there are usually none from Jamaica. Hers, he said, was among “a couple” received this year.“Prior to that nothing ever came even in the form of an application so we were quite excited to see this… But it doesn’t make sense, the headquarters is here (and) it’s an island,” he said.

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J"can selected as alternate candidate for ISA training programme