Sports Magazine
Somebody give players a bat on the backside
Kenya’s captain Steve Tikolo (right) celebrates with Tanmay Mishra after they beat Canada in their World Cup cricket match in March 2007. The veteran Tikolo will be called upon yet again to deliver with his bat at this year’s World Cup in Asia. Photo/FILE
Posted Sunday, September 5 2010 at 14:44
In Summary
- Performance has plummeted, as manifested by loss of early wickets, paltry runs and lack of early wicket haul, as players shun club duty
The national cricket team players might have signed contracts with Cricket Kenya but the woes bedevilling the country’s sport seem not over yet.
It’s no secret that Kenyan cricket has sunk to its lowest ebb since the historic appearance of the national team in the 2003 Cricket World Cup semi-finals.
Precisely, everything is in a shambles, right from the sport’s administration. What of the story state of the national team playing unit and its technical bench.
Last month the team slumped to a 4-0 thrashing by Indian provincial sides Baroda and Gujarat in the one-day Tri-Nations series and were tossed aside in a three-day contest by Baroda by an innings and 43 runs and Gujarat by an innings.
The awful performance came in the heels of a disappointing display at the ICC World Cricket League Division One in the Netherlands in June where their bid to reclaim the title they last won in 2008 was vapourised as they lost all their five matches.
The ‘shadow boxing’ that had existed for more than two months reached its climax when the players boycotted training in June, leading to a last-minute cancellation of a warm-up tour to England ahead of the Netherlands contest.
The players were disgruntled over poor terms and the cancellation of the trip to England.
Following a series of meetings with CK officials and their representatives though, the players signed new one-year contracts which run until May 31 next year.
The contracts expired in May and had been expected to be renewed without difficulty, CK offering a 10 per cent pay rise despite continuing poor on-field performances from the the 16-man national squad.
But are the players ready for the task that awaits them at next year’s World Cup? Are they well-conditioned to face Pakistan, New Zealand, Canada, Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, whose preparations are so far way ahead?
The Super League (Nairobi Provincial Cricket Association League) that has been a yardstick in selecting the national team has, of late, lacked quality in terms of competition.
But lack of incentives and poor organisation have seen most of the national team players not giving their best for the clubs.
A directive by CK that the contracted national players be distributed among Super League teams seemed to have rubbed the clubs the wrong way as they questioned who would foot the salary bill.
Shunning club duty
Some players have had issues with clubs over salaries with those in the national team shunning club duty in the Super League. Swamipaba were hit hard by this.




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