Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

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bayhaus
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by bayhaus »

I still think selectors of all people do not rreally have to have played ionternational cricket and would lean more to the coach being the one who would have played but here is another opinion
Source: http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/co ... 01527.html
Who after Fletcher?
In the past Indian coaches have been appointed based on what they achieved in their playing careers; the current team cannot have one of those
Aakash Chopra
Nearly two years ago, when Duncan Fletcher replaced Gary Kirsten as the coach of the Indian team, he must have thought that a success similar to Kirsten's would improve his coaching CV exponentially. After all, there is no bigger test as a coach than taking charge of one of the world's most influential set of cricketers. But at the back of his mind would have been the case of Greg Chappell, who was booted out by a vociferous Indian public and an unhappy bunch of senior cricketers.

No points for guessing where Fletcher stands today. The last 18 months have been horrendous for him and India.

Wasn't it supposed to be one of the easier assignments? India were No. 1 in Tests and World Cup winners. All Fletcher had to do was consolidate. But that's where most of us, and Fletcher, got it wrong, for coaching and mentoring aren't so much about preservation as about fortification.

His contract will soon come to an end. So who will be the right person for the job now, especially with India on a downward spiral?

There have, as usual, been calls for an Indian coach. This reminds me of a training session Jonty Rhodes, then South Africa's fielding coach, conducted for his players before a friendly match against Delhi years ago. He placed different coloured cones at various angles in different parts of the field, and the South African players went on to display how a professionally run international unit carries out a fielding drill.

While South Africa went about practising in a meticulously planned manner, we, the Delhi players, did a few laps and some very basic fielding practice. One such drill was reminiscent of how cricket was played nearly a century ago. Our coach, a former India player, got us to stand in a semi-circle around him. One of us would throw a ball at him and he would deflect it with his hands back towards us, trying to change the direction of the ball regularly to catch us by surprise. It was Mickey Mouse stuff for first-class cricketers. The South African players couldn't resist a chuckle looking at our archaic fielding drill.

The only criterion the Delhi association considered while assigning this former Indian player the role of coaching a first-class team was his experience in international cricket. To be fair, his resumé was inspiring, loaded with many cricketing achievements over a long career, but it wasn't appropriate for this job, because he hadn't upgraded his knowledge with the changing times.

Another coach, also a former India player of repute, would typically respond to any cricket-related query with, "Jigar se khelo" ("Play with your gut"). Since he had been a very good cricketer in his heyday, we often asked him for tips, and invariably his advice was this statement.

Unfortunately this sort of coaching isn't an aberration in India. The history of coaching in the country is littered with many such oddities and incidents, which aren't limited to players of the past.

Many Indian coaches, for instance, have shied away from taking on the responsibility of correcting a player's technical flaws. One coach, now associated with an IPL franchise and a Ranji team, didn't know how to fix a fast bowler's no-ball problem. To correct an overstepping issue you only need to measure the run-up with a tape, or mark the point of the jump and put something close to the popping crease that works as a deterrent. The coach in question simply scolded the erring bowler every time he overstepped.

Many former India players have tried their hand at coaching, considering it the easiest option after retirement. While playing cricket at the highest level for a reasonable amount of time does teach you to deal with many issues in the game, and involving a team's needs, it doesn't always teach you how to pass on that knowledge to others, especially the finer nuances of individual play.

The difference between learning and teaching is the difference between a player and a good coach. A player can point out a fault, but a good coach will come up with solutions to rectify that fault without tinkering too much with the existing strengths of the player. It helps if you have played cricket, for it allows you to understand better and quicker, but only having played the game is not a good enough qualification for a coach.



While playing cricket at the highest level for a reasonable amount of time does teach you to deal with many issues in the game, and involving a team's needs, it doesn't always teach you how to pass on that knowledge to others



Some of the best players of the game have made poor coaches, because it's unimaginable for them to fathom why what was so easy for them seems so difficult for another. For instance, why should a player have trouble releasing the ball with an upright seam or playing an on-drive without falling over? These things come naturally to great players and they don't have the ability to understand the difficulties less-talented players confront.

I remember the story of a young player who asked Brian Lara for a few tips while practising against the bowling machine. Lara spoke to him about the importance of getting the front leg out of the way while playing on the front foot, but the player was unable to grasp the explanation. Lara decided to show the kid how it was done. He asked the feeder to increase the pace, walked in to bat without leg guards, and put on a scintillating display of high-class batting for 20 minutes, in which he played all the inswinging balls through the covers and the outswingers through midwicket. The kid admired every shot from the master but remained at sea about his problems, just as he had been before speaking to Lara.

Now that Fletcher seems out of favour more or less, and the Indian board might be likely to be looking for an Indian coach to salvage the team's lost pride, the question is: should a candidate's credentials as a player, and his nationality, be kept in mind, or should his qualifications and body of work as a coach be considered over them?

While the idea of India having an Indian coach is definitely plausible, we must not forget why the BCCI chose, more than a decade ago, to pick a foreign coach over an Indian one. In the days before then, Indian coaches were chosen not for their coaching skills but for their past contributions as players. These former cricketers didn't acknowledge the seriousness of their new assignment and didn't pursue it with as much diligence. They failed to realise that to do justice to a new job, they had to start from scratch and educate themselves. Playing for the country gave them an advantage, but only just, for they still needed to learn how to pass on their knowledge efficiently.

The other problem most cricketers had with Indian coaches was their affiliations to their respective states and zones. Indian coaches of the past wouldn't think twice before talking to a player in a shared regional language. While there was nothing wrong in doing so in private, doing so publicly led to a feeling of discord.

If we were to look for an Indian coach to replace Fletcher, we must look at the ones who have taken NCA coaching courses to acquire theoretical knowledge of how to identify and rectify players' mistakes and have handled assignments with Ranji and India A teams. There are a few of them.

The next India coach will be taking over a young team that is going through a crucial transition, so he will need to have a lot more than game sense and man-management skills. He won't only be required to make plans but also to get personnel ready to execute those plans.

While there's a case for having an Indian coach, it's naïve to believe that anyone who has played a lot of cricket and is Indian will automatically resurrect the team.
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

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His Highness Mugabe.

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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by eugene »

I do have to say that as a professional classical musician, some of the best teachers are often not the best performers and conversely some of the best performers are not good teachers as they have never suffered from technical deficiencies themselves. I would imagine there is a lot of similarity in the sporting realm as well.
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by hhm »

Coldheart was so eager to highlight that some of Makoni's peers, from junior levels, made it to provincial and international level yet he did not. In his mind they were not blocked, so what was so unique about Makoni who was 'blocked'? Essentially the Minister called into question Makoni's talent - that he wasn't good enough at all to reach that level, not because he was blocked. Logically and objectively this cannot, and need not, be verified, but as it so happens, he thereby invoked the ire of possibly a lot of names in this article, plus many more not mentioned.

Even though Coldheart's statements were directed specifically at Makoni, it was a very thin line to tread, and it inevitably broadened to include many aggrieved men. If he is not careful he may end up inviting Makoni allies through his careless reasoning. The unfortunate thing is that many of these may be scattered across the globe, serving as more competent lawyers than himself, or influential individuals in some other superior capacity in various professions. Not a smart move by the Senator. Sadly, it increasingly appears to be the order of the day for him lately...

I predicted Makoni would do this. Very smart of Givemore to bring to the fore examples of individuals who were literally blocked and genuinely believe that to be the case, yet it's now being implied that like Makoni, they were never talented enough to reach a certain level. Perhaps that will remind them of the painful injustices they felt, bring to their attention current efforts by the Minister to dislodge their friend, comrade, hero and guru of their sons and nephews who are passionate about the game he brought to their doorsteps, and rile them into action.
Coltart should face his demons

Givemore Makoni
Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart’s article in yesterday’s issue of The Herald about selectors, cricket and myself, cannot go unchallenged. Although the Minister was responding to

an article by The Herald’s Robson Sharuko, published on Saturday, he draws me into the subject and, I feel, I also have a right to be heard.

The Minister was challenged to answer a key question, as to whether there were any people whose path to the national cricket team in this country was blocked by the colour of their skin and, if that was the case, how should those people be treated when playing for the same national team, where they were blocked, becomes the ticket to hold certain positions in the same game?

Sharuko’s question was linked to me, because I had raised the issue, and also argued why should I be judged, on the basis of whether or not I had played for the national team given the challenges people like me faced.

Coltart, in his answer, asks a question as to who are those people who could have been victims of racial prejudice, in their quest to play for the national cricket team, and how many are they out there.
He even questions if I was good enough to make the grade, not only in the national team, but even in the provincial one like Mashonaland, by giving examples of some black cricketers who played for such teams who were about my age.

To me, this simply shows that the Minister is not well versed when it comes to issues that we faced as black cricketers and needs a lengthy session of education so that he can start to appreciate where we are coming from, where we are right now and where we want to be.

I find it annoying that the Minister tries to ignore our history, as blacks trying to play cricket in Zimbabwe at that time.

Clubs like Bionics and Takashinga identified and nurtured a whole generation of black players, who found their path to the national teams blocked, and who could find themselves being told that you cannot be the convenor of selectors, today, because they didn’t play for the national team.

I’m not sure if these people, just like me, wish to be involved in the selection process of the national team but that doesn’t mean their cases should not be highlighted because it’s the system that we need to highlight, which I believed is being structured in a very wrong way.

I hope the Minister has heard of these people — Blessing Zikhali, one of the best spinners ever produced in this country and in my opinion second only to John Traicos, for all his excellent talent, he never made it to the national team.

Why?
What about Barry Ribatika, Walter Chawaguta, who developed into a coach good enough to take charge of the same national team that he couldn’t play for, Shepherd Makunura, Emmanuel Dube, Crispen Pswarayi, Nick Singo, Patrick Gada, Moses Chitare, Blessing Ngondo?

What about Farai Nongerai, the fastest bowler in the country during his time, who only went as far a Board XI and was frustrated by the system he had to take up the fight with some white players over the race issue?

What about Mike Pemhiwa, a top order left-hander who was nothing but class and scored lots of runs during his time, averaging way better than a lot of white players, but never had a chance to play for Zimbabwe, let alone first class cricket?

What about Blessing Zikhali, Kudzai Shoko, Blessing Ngondo, Mike Pemhiwa, Franchis Ncube the late Paul Musikiwa, Stanley Mwale, George Tandi, the Mudede brothers?

What about Darlington Matambanadzo, Bruce Makova, Lazarus Zizhou, George Tandi, Claudius Mukandiwa, Square Square, Stanley Timoni, Paul Musekiwa, Dakarayi Kuhlengisa, Admire Marodza, all these players Minister, not good enough for the national team?

You talked about the Under-15 trials I attended in ’88, and I have to say they remind me of the day when I had to borrow a bat from Steve Mangongo, who was a good player, but never made it to the national team.

When you write the history of cricket in this country and you don’t include Steve Mangongo, people will tell you that there is a chapter missing, it will be dismissed as one that isn’t a true reflection of the game.

But for all his legendary status now, and his rightful place in the history books of our cricket, Steve never played for the national team, not because he wasn’t good enough, but because there were hurdles for people like him and me.

Surely, after what Steve has done, can you tell me that he is not qualified to be the convenor of selectors in cricket if he wishes to take such a post because he didn’t play for the national team?
And this is the same man who groomed most of the black players that we see today.

So it’s not only Makoni who will be affected, it’s a whole generation.
The Minister uses a sporting discipline like triathlon to illustrate the point that his move cannot be deemed racist, the same way he used bowls the other day.

Firstly, triathlon is still a minority sport and does not have a similar history to cricket.
At no stage in its history was there ever a fight between blacks and whites over selection to the national team.

The Minister wants to give an impression that the issue of black players being blocked from representing their national team in cricket is something new.

This issue raised its ugly head years ago and Zimbabwe Cricket had to act by appointing an independent management consultant, Dr Zackrison, to lead the Integration and Task force committee, whose mandate was to find out whether there was racism in Zimbabwe Cricket.
Why would the ZC spend a lot of money on such expensive consultancy, to try and resolve things, if the issue of racism in cricket was not that serious?

When you invest in such programmes, you trying to find a way forward, so that the nation and the game can move on, and it’s not about individuals as appears to be the case with the measures related to the selectors.

Now that the Minister has decided to answer the few questions raised by Sharuko, would it be possible for him to publicly respond to all the issues that have arisen from this debate?

Did he lead a delegation to Cape Town to meet the England cricket team during the 2003 World Cup and advise them not to fulfill its World Cup fixture in Zimbabwe arguing that it was not correct, from both a cricket and a political standpoint, for England to do so?

Was he in any way involved in the donning of black armbands by Andy Flower and Henry Olonga to mourn the “death of democracy” during a World Cup match in 2003?

Why can’t the Minister give us the full story of what happened in bowls ahead of last year’s World Bowls Championships in Australia and who were the players who complained to him about selection?

Why is it that the issues being raised by the Minister are virtually the same issues that were raised by the white players, during the rebellion in 2004, and the only difference is now that they are being raised by someone in Government who has a bigger influence in sport as the Minister?

The Minister talks about the team not performing and gives this impression that the old team, which was dominated by whites, was better.

While they were competitive, they didn’t do anything out of this world and we were always the lowest ranked nation in Tests.

Why doesn’t the Minister consider that the team of Andy Flower and company benefited a lot from the tours, going to England, Australia and all the places to play, and also hosting those teams here?

How do you compare a team that benefited from such exposure with one that is now playing one Test series in one year? It takes us back to those political decisions to persuade teams like England not to come. That’s the consequence of such actions Minister.

Givemore Makoni is the Zimbabwe Cricket convenor of selectors and chief executive of Southern Rocks cricket franchise.
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by hhm »

Summarised quite well in this 'exchange' with the senator.
The problem is very few people are privy to the previous clashes that Makoni has had with the minister over selection issues culminating in the latest spat.

Coltart is a clever man; a lawyer, who has neatly dressed his directives that one would have to meticulously scrutinise them to find fault.

Coltart has told us that his directives compelling all national selectors to have played for Zimbabwe in their respective disciplines is not meant for cricket alone but all national sports.

But it is Coltart’s overzealous passion for cricket which drives him to phone selectors each time they name a squad to question the exclusion of certain players that betrays him.

That Coltart’s directives leave no room for special circumstances such as those of Makoni and assistant Zimbabwe national cricket team coach Stephen Mangongo, who discovered and nurtured half of the current national team including former skipper Tatenda Taibu after establishing Takashinga Cricket Club in 1996, blows his cover.

We should get one thing right here. Makoni is not fighting to remain as convener of selectors, but to safeguard the gains of cricket transformation that Coltart seeks to subtly reverse.

Judging from past selection feuds, it would seem Coltart is trying to use ministerial privileges to sort out a personality issue.

I understand why it’s so easy for Makoni to brand Coltart a racist considering the battle he fought to gain racial equity in cricket.

The Coltart/Makoni issue is purely a personality clash and has nothing to do with cricket.

Coltart has always wanted to get rid of Makoni. The minister decided to fast track his directives after learning of the convener’s decision to omit 38-year old spin bowler Raymond Price from the squad to tour West Indies.

That he could choose the eve of a tour to change the selection panel shows the minister did not want Makoni to be involved in the selection of the touring party and the deadline of February 1 betrays the minister’s underhand dealings.
The minister makes fervent efforts to say there wasn't any fast-tracking, he was ignorant of the intentions to leave out Price etc. Even at this point, the Minister fails to see that sweeping changes proposed to the SRC on Deceber 3, deliberated over a few days, and concluded and issued with little consultation with the parties it's meant for, to be strictly implemented by 1 February, is grossly suspicious!

If you were implementing anything of this magnitude, you would primarily consider its impact on the biggest of all organisation that it's meant to affect. In some cases you would go to the extent of piloting it in the smallest organisation so that benefits there can be used to justify imposing the directive on other sporting disciplines. Race and political issues aside, the cricket team is set to leave for their biggest tour after a very long time! Why would you see anything positive about installing a new/interim selection team - black or white - with little time to familiarise themselves with the goings on, instead of waiting until we reach a time when the Zim cricket team has no commitments like the Sep-Dec period that just elapsed? The timing and turnaround period is simply too short for any right minded individual to ignore the underlying suspicions of a hidden agenda.
For example he makes the statement that the directives were “fast tracked” in response to Zimbabwe Cricket’s selection of a squad of 24 for the West Indies and because, so it is alleged, that Ray Price was excluded.

The SRC directive issued by Col Nhemachena I sent to him last week states clearly that my proposal to the SRC was sent by me to the SRC on the 3rd December last year well before presumably the ZC panel had even met to consider who would be in the squad.

He clearly deliberately left that fact out from an objective source presumably because it was fact that would get in the way of a good story.

Had he spoken to Col Nhemachena he would have found out that there has been no “fast tracking” of this issue. Indeed I was not even aware that Price had been left out of the squad when this furore broke last week and in any event see that Price appears to be in the squad of 24 – so this would appear to be another flagrant fabrication.
Another stupid move from Coltart is that by denying knowing anything about Price's exclusion(even though he was probably tipped of about it), he opens up to the bundles of evidence that Makoni probably has of him being notified in advance and proceeding to involve himself in arguments over squad/match XI selection as a result, long before the public has any knowledge of it. :roll:

Good point Kevin. The Minister must unravel the powers that Cricket Committee has. If it has significant power as has been reported, and Alistair Campbell is in charge of it, we must be told it role between the Boarch, Chairman, MD, Selectors and Coaches. I have a feeling that will further call into question why clarity or duplication of powers, within the chain of command of the organisation, was not a more urgent matter! The answer may probably lie in that they have the responsibility of appointing selectors. That AC resignation from the post of Convenor was a huge surprise...
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by foreignfield »

A lot of names there, and only a few of them ring a bell which is not surprising when they didn't make it in to FC cricket or further.

Anyone on here who knows these players?

... and Ray Price seems to be aging by the minute in these "reports". As Mark Twain famously said: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated".

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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by Ming »

foreignfield wrote:A lot of names there, and only a few of them ring a bell which is not surprising when they didn't make it in to FC cricket or further.

Anyone on here who knows these players?

... and Ray Price seems to be aging by the minute in these "reports". As Mark Twain famously said: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated".
I know Bernard Pswarayi (it's not Crispen, unless he had a brother I didn't know about) - I was at school with him. A multitalented sportsman who represented Zim and Mashonaland in a variety of sports if I remember correctly. A pretty zippy bowler - I was never happy to face him as a 16/17 year old! A more than useful lower order batsmen - I remember once almost getting clobbered on the head as a spectator when he hit a six off the hip into the crowd! I know he went on to play for academy and other first-class sides, but never made a big breakthrough.
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by foreignfield »

Ming wrote:I know Bernard Pswarayi (it's not Crispen, unless he had a brother I didn't know about) - I was at school with him. A multitalented sportsman who represented Zim and Mashonaland in a variety of sports if I remember correctly. A pretty zippy bowler - I was never happy to face him as a 16/17 year old! A more than useful lower order batsmen - I remember once almost getting clobbered on the head as a spectator when he hit a six off the hip into the crowd! I know he went on to play for academy and other first-class sides, but never made a big breakthrough.
Ah, thanks. I was wondering whether this was some other "forgotten Pswarayi". It seems Bernard only got limited opportunities to prove himself at FC level although his record is not too shabby.

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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by bayhaus »

Enter ZC!
Source: http://www.herald.co.zw/index.php?optio ... QIf1uhzo18
obson Sharuko Senior Sports Editor
ZIMBABWE Cricket yesterday rejected the Sports Commission’s controversial directive, on the appointment of national team selectors, saying it was a violation of their constitution, in breach of

their contractual obligations and in conflict with the International Cricket Council’s Articles of Association.

The Sports Commission, acting under the orders of the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, David Coltart, had directed that as of next Friday, only those who have played for the national teams would qualify to hold positions on the panel of selectors.

The ZC yesterday responded by saying that neither Coltart nor the Sports Commission had the legal capacity to force the organisation to embrace the directive.

The directive torched a storm in ZC, an organisation that has battled racial divisions in the past, with convenor of selectors, Givemore Makoni, charging that it was targeted at removing him from his post because he didn’t play for the national team.

Makoni claimed it was unfair for him to be kicked out of the panel of selectors, on the basis that he never played for the national team, without taking into consideration that his path into that team was blocked by hurdles planted by a sporting discipline that was pregnant with racial barriers.

Yesterday, ZC managing director, Wilfred Mukondiwa, officially wrote to Sports Commission director general, Charles Nhemachena, advising him that it was impossible for his organisation to implement the package of measures contained in the directive.

“Zimbabwe Cricket (‘ZC’) position on the directive is the following:
The constitution of ZC is registered with the Sport and Recreation Commission in terms of Section 29 of the Sport and Recreation Commission Act (Chapter 25:15)(‘The Act’). Subsection (7) of the Section provides that the constitution or rules or amendments, as the case may be, do not come into effect until they are registered in terms of Section 29. The constitution of ZC having been duly registered is effective and binding on the ZC and all the stakeholders.

The board of the ZC has, in terms of its constitution, registered in terms of the Act, appointed a national selection committee made up of two independent selectors, one of which is a convenor. The national head coach is also a member of the committee. The captain of the national team is also involved in selection but has no voting rights.

The effect of the directive is to require ZC to amend its lawfully registered constitution so as to oblige the board to stipulate the qualifications of the convenors as required by the directive. Simply complying with the directive, without amending the constitution, will not be competent. There will be no legal basis for reversing the actions of the board lawfully and constitutionally taken unless the constitution is itself amended.

There is presently no cause for the amendment of the constitution except the directive. The Commission cannot require the ZC to act unlawfully or outside its constitution. Moreover, ZC has entered into contracts with the current independent selectors which would be summarily terminated if the directive were to be implemented. ZC has no cause to terminate the contracts of the current selectors and has not made provision for the damages claimable by them in its budget for the breach of contracts that will be induced by implementing the directive. The contracts are due to subsist for a period of 12 months.

In terms of the Act, it does not appear that the Commission can require a national association to amend its constitution in such a manner as to determine the persons who shall take particular positions. That would appear to be micromanaging the national associations, which is not consistent with the manifest tenor of the Act. The Act empowers the Commission to provide a hands-off oversight role, except in case of a disciplinary nature. With respect, therefore, it appears that the Commission has no legal capacity to require ZC to do what its directive demands. ZC’s position is based on a reading following provisions of the Act which the SRC and the Minister may be purporting to rely upon.

Section 19 of the Act is a broad statement of the objectives of the Commission. It does not prescribe any powers to enforce the objectives. The powers have to be found elsewhere in the Act. As such, the objects are to a large extent general and apply to the controlling of sport and recreational activities in the country. They set parameters within which the Commission defines policy and do not empower the Commission to do specific actions in the administration of any sport. That is left to national associations.

Section 21 of the Act, as read with the Second Schedule, gives the Commission administrative powers to carry out its functions as a corporate body and does not certainly allow the Commission to act as it seeks to do in the present instance. The power to prescribe qualifications of national selectors, or any of the office-bearers, is left to the national associations and is not a function of the Commission.
Section 23 gives the Minister the power to give written directives of a “general character” which are in the national interest. The directive of the Minister in the present matter is not of a general character and from the points raised below will be shown to be clearly not in national interest. In any event, such directives are supposed to have a financial effect on the operations of the Commission.

This is apparent from the requirement that the Commission should report the effect of the directive in its report in terms of the Audit and Exchequer Act (Chapter 23:03). It is therefore clear that the directives that the Minister may give, in terms of the Section, are administrative in character and do not have anything to do with the running of associations.

From a practical point of view, even if ZC were minded to implement the directive, there are a number of serious problems. The amendment of the constitution cannot be achieved before the 1st of February 2013 for obvious reasons relating to the notice periods required for the necessary meetings in terms of the constitution.”

Mukondiwa said there were other challenges, which were not entirely constitutional, which made it impossible to implement the Sports Commission’s directive and these were:
It is a known fact that the game of cricket, until about 2004, was largely a minority sport. Deliberate steps were taken to integrate the sport and achieve a multi-racial composition in the playing of the sport of cricket at all levels. That process is still on-going and some of the results are apparent in the upcoming crop of young players of all races who currently constitute the national team.

Because of the position described above, there are not enough persons of a multi-racial mix eligible and available to be appointed as national selectors if the directive were to be implemented.
The implementation of the directive in the present circumstances would result in the racially skewed composition of the selectors which prevailed in the period prior to the year 2004. That would be obviously turning back the hands of time to the pre-2004 era and undo the integration efforts and programmes that were beginning to bear fruit. The current pool of retired black players is still too small to provide the selectors that may be appointed in terms of the directive. The result will be obvious.

A quick review of the status of the retired black former players, who played for the national teams, proves the point made above. Below is a table profiling the 10 persons who would otherwise be eligible if the directive were to implemented. It is apparent that, from their location in the world and their current vocations, they would not be available or willing to be appointed national selectors at this point in time or in the near future.

H.K Olonga (living and working in the UK; E.Z Matambanadzo (living and working in the USA); M. Mbangwa (living and working as a cricket commentator in SA); D.T Mutendera (living and working in Zimbabwe. Employed by ZC as a development coach); B.T Watambwa (living and working in Belgium); T. Taibu (retired to church ministry); D.T Hondo (playing club cricket in UK and New Zealand); N.B Mahwire (attending university in SA); W. Mwayenga (living and working in Australia. Involved in coaching in Sydney); T.V Mufambisi (living and working in Zimbabwe. self-employed).

Some of the current national selectors are people who did not play for the national team at any stage and did not have the opportunity to do so. They have, however, been able to contribute tremendously to the development of cricket and have raised sterling cricketers such as Tatenda Taibu. It does not make sense to contend that the same people are not able to serve as convenors of selectors. Their record speaks for itself and it appears patently unjust to disqualify them on account of their previously disadvantaged status.

For comparative purposes, looking at South Africa, which is closer to home and whose circumstances at some stage were similar to us, it is worth noting that the following were appointed as national selectors in the post apartheid era when they had not played for their national team: Gerald Majola, Mustapha Khan. Morris Garda, Joubert Strydom, S. K Reddy, Anver Mall, Rushdie Majid, Haroon Lorgat, Winkie Ximba.

In view of the foregoing, ZC does not consider that it is proper for the Commission to require it to comply with the directive. Doing so would be in violations of the provisions of the ZC constitution and in breach of contractual obligations.

Further, the actions of the Commission, in that regard, would be in violation of Article 2.9(B) of the ICC Articles of Association which prohibit government interference in the management of the affairs of the member associations.”
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bayhaus
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Re: Race Storm Hits Zim Cricket

Post by bayhaus »

And more...
Coltart abusing power to sort personality issues
IT is very easy to dismiss Zimbabwe Cricket convener of selectors Givemore Makoni as an insecure racist himself who is trying to safeguard his job by playing the race card against Sports minister David Coltart, just as it is also easy to support the minister’s directives to exclude those who have not played for Zimbabwe from national selection panels.
Independent Sports View by Kevin Mapasure
The problem is very few people are privy to the previous clashes that Makoni has had with the minister over selection issues culminating in the latest spat.
Coltart is a clever man; a lawyer, who has neatly dressed his directives that one would have to meticulously scrutinise them to find fault.
Coltart has told us that his directives compelling all national selectors to have played for Zimbabwe in their respective disciplines is not meant for cricket alone but all national sports.
But it is Coltart’s overzealous passion for cricket which drives him to phone selectors each time they name a squad to question the exclusion of certain players that betrays him.
That Coltart’s directives leave no room for special circumstances such as those of Makoni and assistant Zimbabwe national cricket team coach Stephen Mangongo, who discovered and nurtured half of the current national team including former skipper Tatenda Taibu after establishing Takashinga Cricket Club in 1996, blows his cover.
We should get one thing right here. Makoni is not fighting to remain as convener of selectors, but to safeguard the gains of cricket transformation that Coltart seeks to subtly reverse.
Judging from past selection feuds, it would seem Coltart is trying to use ministerial privileges to sort out a personality issue.
I understand why it’s so easy for Makoni to brand Coltart a racist considering the battle he fought to gain racial equity in cricket.
The Coltart/Makoni issue is purely a personality clash and has nothing to do with cricket.
Coltart has always wanted to get rid of Makoni. The minister decided to fast track his directives after learning of the convener’s decision to omit 38-year old spin bowler Raymond Price from the squad to tour West Indies.
That he could choose the eve of a tour to change the selection panel shows the minister did not want Makoni to be involved in the selection of the touring party and the deadline of February 1 betrays the minister’s underhand dealings.
Zimbabwe is set to leave for the West Indies next month.
Yes; ministers must be hands-on and I commend Coltart for that, but his energetic attempts to micro-manage Zimbabwe Cricket is highly suspicious.
I share yis desire to build a strong winning team, but bringing back people who deserted the game in protest over the blooding in of young and talented black cricketers cannot be the solution.
Zimbabwe’s performance does not reflect Makoni’s competence or lack of it as I know that there are under currencies at play. Those who follow cricket, including the minister, know that the present set up gives too much power to the Cricket Committee chaired by Alastair Campbell. Needless to mention that Campbell is one of the former rebel players who was fiercely opposed to the rapid rate of transformation, but he was still persuaded to return to the game by Coltart.
Campbell calls the shots in team selections but when things go awry, the blame is placed on Makoni. But in the past we have had interference from Campbell on team selection.
Would removing people like Makoni who have never played for Zimbabwe solve the fitness problems of skipper Brendan Taylor? How many times has Taylor failed a fitness test but continues to be included in the side without any qualms from Coltart?
He failed another fitness test before the training squad from which the team to tour West Indies would be selected was named but there was strong support to pick him. By the way, Taylor is not injured at all. He just doesn’t work on his fitness because he knows his place is guaranteed.
Coltart needs to tell the nation why he is pushing for changes ahead of the appointment of a new coach. Mangongo is a favourite for the job together with Grant Flower and Gary Brent.The post becomes vacant when current coach Alan Butcher’s contract runs out in April.
Is this not the same Flower who told The Australian in February 2011 that “life in Africa is very turbulent (and) I’ll always keep my options open”?
All we need are people who will pick the est sides whatever colour composition.
If Makoni is failing on his mandate he should be removed only by his employers ZC.
Such problems as the one we have had this week can be avoided if Coltart allows administrators to run the game without his interference.

David Coltart Responds
I am appalled by the article written in today’s Independent by Kevin Mapasure.
I exchanged e-mails with him last week and he could have easily sought clarification, which he never did, never mind speak to me to get balance in the story he has written.
In today’s article he has made some outrageous allegations which are laid out as fact without any proof other than presumably the mere says so of an interested party.
He has totally ignored the statement I issued last week and the subsequent statements issued this week. He has not tried to get comment from people like Col Nhemachena.
For example he makes the statement that the directives were “fast tracked” in response to Zimbabwe Cricket’s selection of a squad of 24 for the West Indies and because, so it is alleged, that Ray Price was excluded.
The SRC directive issued by Col Nhemachena I sent to him last week states clearly that my proposal to the SRC was sent by me to the SRC on the 3rd December last year well before presumably the ZC panel had even met to consider who would be in the squad.
He clearly deliberately left that fact out from an objective source presumably because it was fact that would get in the way of a good story.
Had he spoken to Col Nhemachena he would have found out that there has been no “fast tracking” of this issue. Indeed I was not even aware that Price had been left out of the squad when this furore broke last week and in any event see that Price appears to be in the squad of 24 – so this would appear to be another flagrant fabrication.
He suggests that I am in some form of cahoots with Alistair Campbell again completely ignoring my criticism of Campbell regarding the exclusion of Vusi Sibanda for the New Zealand tour – another well-known fact presumably which got in the way of his desired objective.
I have updated the statement I issued last Saturday to include a response to some of the outrageous allegations made today and I trust that this will be published in full.
Yours sincerely,
David

Senator David Coltart
Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture
www.davidcoltart.com
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