Hilaire: WI must pick best 11, not 11 best
Story Created: May 5, 2012 at 10:55 PM ECT
Story Updated: May 5, 2012 at 10:55 PM ECT
l BRIDGETOWN
West Indies Cricket Board CEO, Ernest Hilaire says the time has come for the regional selectors to focus on picking their "best eleven" as opposed to the "eleven best" players available.
The WICB point man said it was crucial West Indies began to mould a cohesive unit, stressing this would require choosing players committed to the game and not players with star power.
"For a decade or so the selectors were guided by a process which had them arriving at the eleven best players to take the field," Hilaire told the Barbados Cricket Association awards ceremony here Thursday night.
"With the eleven best players on the park our results went from bad to worse and yet worse still.
"There has been a paradigm shift. The emphasis is on selecting, not necessarily the eleven best players but the 'best eleven'. It is not dissimilar to asking whether we prefer a team of stars or a star team. They are decidedly different."
He added: "The best eleven may not include the most attractive players but is rather a combination of players who, as a group, are more likely to bring positive results and show a commitment to sustained development."
In recent times, West Indies have fielded a young, inexperienced unit, with most of their big name players missing for one reason or another.
Rookie players like teenaged opener Kraigg Brathwaite, Kieran Powell, Adrian Barath and Kirk Edwards have emerged, while major drawing cards like big-hitting opener Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Dwayne Bravo have all gone missing from the regional squad.
Hilaire said though the team had not been winning extensively, there were positive signs of development with this new ethos.
"Though the victories have not been tumbling in, there can be little doubt that West Indies cricket is showing the signs of learning the first characteristic of any successful enterprise – the determination to succeed," Hilaire contended.
"We have seen a greater commitment to fight to the very end, we have seen what was once thumping three and four day defeats in Test cricket now turned into epic final day battles.
"This new approach is not far off from producing the results we all yearn for. Change does not happen overnight, it is a process, sometimes painful, always with mistakes and mis-steps but once on the right path the results are certain.
"I implore you to recognise that from the days when our team seemed conditioned to losing we now have a team which is battling to win and believing that it can in fact achieve victories."
Story Created: May 5, 2012 at 10:55 PM ECT
Story Updated: May 5, 2012 at 10:55 PM ECT
l BRIDGETOWN
West Indies Cricket Board CEO, Ernest Hilaire says the time has come for the regional selectors to focus on picking their "best eleven" as opposed to the "eleven best" players available.
The WICB point man said it was crucial West Indies began to mould a cohesive unit, stressing this would require choosing players committed to the game and not players with star power.
"For a decade or so the selectors were guided by a process which had them arriving at the eleven best players to take the field," Hilaire told the Barbados Cricket Association awards ceremony here Thursday night.
"With the eleven best players on the park our results went from bad to worse and yet worse still.
"There has been a paradigm shift. The emphasis is on selecting, not necessarily the eleven best players but the 'best eleven'. It is not dissimilar to asking whether we prefer a team of stars or a star team. They are decidedly different."
He added: "The best eleven may not include the most attractive players but is rather a combination of players who, as a group, are more likely to bring positive results and show a commitment to sustained development."
In recent times, West Indies have fielded a young, inexperienced unit, with most of their big name players missing for one reason or another.
Rookie players like teenaged opener Kraigg Brathwaite, Kieran Powell, Adrian Barath and Kirk Edwards have emerged, while major drawing cards like big-hitting opener Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Dwayne Bravo have all gone missing from the regional squad.
Hilaire said though the team had not been winning extensively, there were positive signs of development with this new ethos.
"Though the victories have not been tumbling in, there can be little doubt that West Indies cricket is showing the signs of learning the first characteristic of any successful enterprise – the determination to succeed," Hilaire contended.
"We have seen a greater commitment to fight to the very end, we have seen what was once thumping three and four day defeats in Test cricket now turned into epic final day battles.
"This new approach is not far off from producing the results we all yearn for. Change does not happen overnight, it is a process, sometimes painful, always with mistakes and mis-steps but once on the right path the results are certain.
"I implore you to recognise that from the days when our team seemed conditioned to losing we now have a team which is battling to win and believing that it can in fact achieve victories."
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