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Tuesday 6 October 2015

STILL RALLYING!

Nothing pretty in pink about latest West Indies' woes...

The West Indies in action during a World Series Cricket Supertest against Australia in 1979. Photo: Getty Images 

by Jon Pierik

While Cricket Australia's immediate focus is on next month's home Test series against New Zealand, and the historic introduction of the pink ball, it's a team that was once clad in pink that has some local officials nervous.

The once mighty West Indies are again in turmoil, this time after coach Phil Simmonds, the former hard-hitting all rounder, was suspended over his criticism of the squad picked for the imminent one-day series of Sri Lanka.

Simmonds, who helped guide the Caribbean islands to a 1-1 Test series result against England earlier this year, was stood down for declaring he had not been given the "best 50-over ODI squad" and faces a disciplinary hearing.

While the ugly side of Caribbean cricket politics is nothing new, that the West Indies are due to play in three Tests in Australia this summer, including the showcase Tests from Boxing Day in Melbourne and New Year's day in Sydney, makes this latest round of trouble particularly worrying.


Cricket purists will be particularly galled to find that some of the West Indies best players - Chris Gayle, Darren Sammy, Dwayne Bravo, Samuel Badree and Kieron Pollard - will be plying their trade in the Twenty20 Big Bash League, held at the same time as the Test series.

While they were once the darlings of world cricket, and famously were dressed in pink during the second year of World Series cricket, the West Indies have never recovered from losing their unofficial world crown to Australia in 1995.

They have plummeted to new depths after last week failing to qualify for the 2017 Champions Trophy tournament, the first time they will miss any of cricket's three big limited-overs events - the 50-overs World Cup, the Champions Trophy and the Twenty20 World Cup. Their spot in the eight-team competition was taken by Bangladesh.

Simmonds, who played 26 Tests and 143 one-day internationals, was appointed head coach in March after a successful eight-year tenure with Ireland. 
But he has again quickly learnt how the politics of Caribbean cricket can make life a misery even for such greats as Sir Vivian Richards.

The latest selection drama has Simmonds, panel chairman Clive Lloyd, and skipper Jason Holder on one side, with fellow selectors Courtney Walsh, Courtney Browne and Eldine Baptiste on the other, the latter winning the battle to have Bravo and Pollard overlooked for the one-day squad.

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