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Kenya cricket now on it’s deathbed

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Ireland national cricket team players wicketkeeper Nill O'brien,William Battlefield and Regan West celebrates Kenya batsman Jimmy Kamande clean bowled during the ICC Intercontinental four day match at Nairobi Gykhana. Photo/CHRIS OMOLLO 

By RICHARD MWANGI Posted Friday, October 17 2008 at 19:52

In Summary

  • With no league and development programmes, the local game is dying

Time is up. Cricket Kenya have nowhere to hide now.

The performance of the Kenya team since Samir Inamdar and his group took over the association has been steadily going down.

From World Cup semi-finalists in 2003, Kenya has been on nose dive. The loss to Ireland early this week in the International Cricket Council (ICC) Intercontintental Cup match marked another low point in Kenya’s cricket.

It comes after an extremely humbling experience against a Pakistan Academy team, which thrashed us 2-0 in a two-match series of four-day games, winning one of them by an innings. The Pakistanis followed it up with a 3-0 whipping of their hosts in the one-day series.

Before that, there had been the Australian Academy cadets who came here last year and walked all over the national team. It is feared even Uganda could now beat Kenya.

The game is on its knees. As the top associate member of the ICC, it is worrying that Kenya has not won this First Class competition, now in its fourth edition. The team’s failure in the multi-day game can be attributed to lack of a first class league in the country.

Big talk

Inamdar and his team told Kenyans they had sponsors waiting in the wings to put money into the game when the defunct Kenya Cricket Association officials left office.

There was big talk about how they would introduce a three-day league, among other things. Was it just the usual electioneering talk?

The only sponsorship for local cricket came via a South Africa company named Sahara Computers. The Saraha Elite league, which they supported, featured Twenty20, one-day 50 over games and a two-day league. It is still unknown if the winners ever received their cash rewards.

Apart from the listless action from the Nairobi Province Cricket Association (NPCA) league, there has been no domestic cricket in the country this year.

The Kenyan cricket board could be the only national sports organisation that does not run a league in the world, and one with only two active branches — Coast Cricket Association (CCA) and the NPCA.

CK inherited some semblance of a development programme in Nairobi — complete with coaches who used to go around schools in Nairobi coaching children. The programme died. The national academy built at the Simba Union Club by ICC funds is now idle.

Such is the sorry state of our development cricket that Kenya has not been to the Under-19 Cricket World Cup — ICC’s premier development tournament — since 2001.

Then, Kenya only took part because they were exempted from qualification. Ever since Kenya was subjected to qualifying tournaments, the team has never been to this tournament.

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Add a comment (6 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by amiqueaz
    Posted October 20, 2008 05:47 PM

    I completely agree with the Mr.Mwangi on this article.He has been associated( as a journalist) with cricket for a long ,long time and knows how good Kenya cricket was in the past.We have taken several steps backwards in the last few years and now teams like Ireland, Scotland, Canada, etc who we could very easily beat have started challening us and even beating us more often.Another point to note is that since Steve Tikolo and Thomas Odoyo we haven't produced any match winning players who could carry the team on their shoulders.

  2. Submitted by Anonymous author
    Posted October 18, 2008 08:34 PM

    Also Kenya's cricket pool is very small - I mean very small, it's not a popular sport and worse it has to compete with football, rugby and other new sports like swimming - so Boitah and Mufzain are both right the game should be popularised and player pool expanded. 2nd modern teams use technology and psychology nowadays to defeat other teams, something I am not sure Kenya does.

  3. Submitted by boitah
    Posted October 18, 2008 01:18 PM

    i would say that the player are lucking morale.hardly no crowds shows up at the satdiums,am optimistic that the sports minister knows nothing abt the game,the game is no longer being introduced to schools. The reporters should play part in geting the game to its best rather than bringing it down.

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