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  • It gets worse

    Contractual issue led to Dyson's demise - WICB director

    CMC
    Thursday, September 03, 2009
    BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) - John Dyson was sacked as West Indies coach because he had not signed his contract for the 18 months he held the job.
    DYSON... fired after home series defeat to Bangladesh
    Conde Riley, a director of the West Indies Cricket Board from Barbados, disclosed that the regional governing body had no choice but to dismiss Dyson.
    Riley, a retired investment banker, is the first vice-president of the Barbados Cricket Association, and also sits on the WICB's finance, as well as human resources committees.
    "When an employee has not signed a contract for 18 months, he cannot be serious and therefore you don't have to have a reason [for termination] - it's a straightforward case," said Riley at a WICB news conference on Tuesday.
    "The directors - like myself - are not responsible for the day-to-day management of the WICB. There is a chief executive officer, who looks after those matters, and is to make sure that all the contracts that are supposed to be signed are signed.
    "The directors meet once a quarter, committees may meet in-between at times, but officially we meet once a quarter, and we then enquire of the CEO if so-and-so has been done, and over a period of time, the directors take a decision."
    Dyson has been temporarily replaced by former Trinidad & Tobago captain and West Indies wicketkeeper David Williams, who is set to condition the team for the ICC Champions Trophy starting later this month in South Africa. Riley acknowledged that having an employee in such a key position working without a signed contract was untenable for the WICB.
    "People would say we were weak, or that he should not have started to work, but there were two CEOs who were employed with Mr Dyson, who were trying to get [him to sign]," said Riley.
    "We discussed it [at a meeting] last November in Antigua. Mr Dyson was at that meeting, and then the team was off to New Zealand, came back, played against England and Bangladesh, and the directors took a decision.
    "It is a very unsafe position to be in when people don't sign contracts and you are paying them in accordance with the provisions of the contract."
    Dyson was fired, after the disastrous home series defeats to Bangladesh in Tests and One-day Internationals, when West Indies fielded a severely depleted line-up.
    This followed a contractual row between the WICB and the West Indies Players' Association, when the majority of the leading players withdrew from consideration.

  • #2
    'Another bad day for Windies cricket'
    Breakdown in talks disappoints Sir Shridath
    CMC
    Wednesday, September 02, 2009
    GEORGETOWN, Guyana (CMC) - A disappointed Sir Shridath Ramphal yesterday described "as another bad day for West Indian cricket", the failure of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) to solve their differences.
    Sir Shridath... cricket is in our regional genes; it cannot be lost
    The two bodies have been at odds over issues relating to players' contracts. The disagreement has already resulted in many of the top West Indies players, including former captain Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Shrivnarine Chanderpaul and Dwayne Bravo boycotting the Bangladesh series and missing out on the Champions Trophy scheduled for later this month.
    Sir Shridath, who was appointed mediator, had been in discussion with the feuding parties since last month and had set the end of August as the deadline for reaching a solution.
    But in a brief statement, the eminent Caribbean jurist warned that West Indies cricket "without fundamental changes, is now likely to deteriorate further".
    Sir Shridath explained that 24 hours before the breakdown, he believed that "agreement between the WICB and WIPA was at hand; and that he had actually invoked assistance of various kinds to make implementation of the Agreement feasible".
    "However, all that changed dramatically when one party introduced an entirely new document and refused to negotiate on any other."
    The matter is now set to go to arbitration.
    Sir Shridath said that he will report to Guyana's President Bharrat Jagdeo, who had used the "good offices of the Chairman of the Caribbean Community (Caricom)" to initiate the mediation process between the feuding parties.
    A report will also be submitted to Caricom Secretary General Edwin Carrington "on the outcome of the mediation effort".
    Sir Shridath said despite the disappointment he was urging cricket followers in the Caribbean not to despair because "cricket is in our regional genes; it cannot be lost".

    Comment


    • #3
      bizarre..their explanation only mek dem look worse!

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

      Comment


      • #4
        So..it to 18 months to DECIDE o fire him for not signing his contract??!!! What a load of hogwash!

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