AndreBaptiste.com BLOG

The Premier Sports info pages of Trinidad and Tobago in the West Indies. This blog is linked to www.andrebaptiste.com

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

CFU News - Warner: Regional football and cricket should share equal place

Warner: Regional football and cricket should share equal place

Issued on February 12, 2008

FIFA Vice President Jack Warner has made a call for the two prime sporting disciplines in the Caribbean – football and cricket - to work hand in hand in order to steady progress to be achieved.

Warner, after meeting with Barbados Prime Minister Honourable David Thompson and that country’s Minister of Sport Esther Byer -Suckoo in Christchurch last weekend, urged the respective authorities and stakeholders to forge new relationships, particularly in an attempt to put West Indies cricket back on the world map.

He blasted the decision by regional cricket authorities, excepting Trinidad, to prevent football matches from being played at cricketing facilities which are among the best in the region to date.

“We have some of the best facilities in the world which are cricket stadiums and it makes no sense not sharing these for the development of other sports, particularly football. You have countries like Guyana and Antigua for instance where their national teams cannot find a proper ground to  train on or play matches because they are saying the main venue is solely for cricket and this cannot work and what I am merely saying is let’s work together to help raise the level of both sports,” Warner said.

“I will get knock for saying this… but unless Cricket has a transfusion of new ideas, concepts, people and structures…it will die. It will not survive because of Twenty-Twenty and what you have seen in South Africa in the last few weeks will not help either,” Warner stated.

“This is not to take any pleasure or joy from cricket’s demise but it is to say that there is room in all countries for the two sports to survive… countries with limited resources should share facilities. Football is denied a venue from Guyana to Antigua,” Warner said, adding that the pattern in the region was unlike Trinidad where the Queen’s Park Oval was willingly making its venue available to the Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation for the staging of matches at no cost to the governing body.

“These facilities can be shared by all. There are no sacred grounds in today’s world of technology. I want to appeal to Governments to open a window for football. The National Flags never be flown on fields of war but they are always flown on the fields of sport and moreso football,” Warner repeated.

He appealed to Thompson to try to influence his colleagues in other Caribbean Governments on a new way of thinking for the development of sport.

“If it’s one thing I ask of you (Prime Minister Thompson) is that you try to convince your colleagues on the importance of sport and let them see the benefits of such involvement through sport tourism thrusts etc.”

Thompson, in his address at the Barbados FA Awards ceremony, subsequently thanked Warner for his support in the development of regional football, adding that his Government has already outlined measures to develop football on that island and will support the establishment of a Professional League in two years. Minister Dr. Byer-Suckoo touched on the strategic goals of the new administration to eliminate the problems of old as they related to limited and/or inadequate facilities to stage sporting events locally and the ongoing process of negotiations to make Kensington Oval available for a wide cross-section of activities.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home