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Cricket West Indies

Cricket West Indies (CWI) is the governing body for cricket in the West Indies (a sporting confederation of over a dozen mainly English-speaking Caribbean countries and dependencies that once formed the British West Indies). It was originally formed in the early 1920s as the West Indies Cricket Board of Control, but changed its name to West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) in 1996. In November 2015, the Board resolved to rename itself as Cricket West Indies as part of a restructuring exercise that would also see the creation of a separate commercial body. This rebranding formally occurred in May 2017.

Cricket West Indies
SportCricket
JurisdictionNational
AbbreviationCWI
Founded1920 (1920) (104 years ago)
AffiliationInternational Cricket Council
Affiliation date31 May 1926 (1926-05-31)
HeadquartersSt. John's, Antigua and Barbuda
PresidentDr. Kishore Shallow
CEOJohnny Grave
Vice president(s)Azim Bassarath
Men's coachAndre Coley and Daren Sammy
Women's coachShane Deitz
Other key staffDirector of Cricket: Miles Bascombe
SponsorCG Insurance, Betway, Blue Waters, Castore, Kookaburra, Masuri, Phizz[1][2]
Replaced
  • West Indies Cricket Board of Control
  • West Indies Cricket Board
Official website
www.windiescricket.com

CWI has been a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) since 1926. It operates the West Indies cricket team and West Indies A cricket team, organising Test tours and one-day internationals with other teams. It also organises domestic cricket in West Indies, including the Regional Four Day Competition and the Regional Super50 domestic one-day (List A) competition. The CWI has also collaborated with Sir Allen Stanford in the organisation of the domestic Stanford 20/20 competition for the Twenty20 format of cricket. Later they created their own Twenty20 league called Caribbean Twenty20 after disbanding Stanford 20/20. In 2013 they created Caribbean Premier League, a Professional Twenty20 league.

CWI's membership includes the six territorial cricket associations of the various countries and territories which contest the West Indies first-class and limited-overs competition in the Caribbean. Each provides two directors, in addition to a number of non-member directors. Two of these associations are themselves multi-national boards representing a number of countries and dependencies.

The president of CWI is Dr Kishore Shallow, who replaced Ricky Skerrit in 2023. Johnny Grave is its chief executive officer.

Since 2005, per an ICC mandate, the West Indies Women's Cricket Federation (WIWCF) has been integrated with CWI. The President of the WIWCF is Carol Whilby-Maxwell and the Secretary is Michael Seepersaud.

CWI is charged with aiding regional development of cricket in the Americas region, under the ICC's development program.

History edit

 
Pre-1999 Flag of the West Indies Cricket Board and Team
 
Flag of the West Indies Cricket Board and Team used until mid-2017

From the 1880s onwards there had been no central body to co-ordinate the Inter-Colonial Tournaments and matches, select composite West Indian XIs for tours and against touring sides and to organise the West Indian tours of England, Canada and the United States. Such organisation as there was, was done by an informal coalition of the major clubs in the region.[3] West Indian cricketers however had felt the need for the establishment of such an organisation although geography and culture were to make such a task difficult. However, with the help of one influential Marylebone Cricket Club member, R. H. Mallett (the manager of the 1906 and 1923 West Indian tours and future manager of the 1930–31 West Indian tour to Australia), representatives of the various territories finally got together and ultimately formed the West Indies Cricket Board of Control. The preliminary meeting was in Bridgetown, Barbados, from which the informal West Indies Cricket Conference was founded in 1926. The West Indies Cricket Conference held its first official meeting on 22 January 1927 at the Bridgetown Club in Barbados attended by Mallett and representatives from the Windward Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados and Demerara (British Guiana). Delegates from Jamaica and the Leeward Islands were invited but unfortunately were unable to attend. At this January meeting the delegates present decided to form the West Indies Cricket Board of Control (WICBC) which would be composed of a president, a secretary and two delegates each from Barbados, Demerara, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago and one delegate each from the Leeward Islands and Windward Islands. The WICBC's first meeting was held on 17 and 18 June 1927 in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad with Harold Austin (the former captain of the 1906 and 1923 West Indian tours of England) serving as the first president.[4] The board as constituted was enlarged in 1982 when the Leeward and Windward Islands were given the same representation as the other full Members. The president was appointed by the board at an ordinary general meeting and had to be a person resident in the West Indies who had shown a keen and active interest in West Indies cricket. His term of office was for two years (and eligible for re-election) or until his successor was appointed. Board members were also thenceforth to be appointed by their Cricket Associations although in British Guiana the Georgetown Cricket Club held this responsibility until 1943, and in Trinidad the Queens Park Oval Club until 1981 when their respective cricket associations were given recognition. There was a provision for associate members who would be entitled to attend meetings but not to move resolutions or vote. Bermuda and Belize had been the only members in this category prior to their cessation as Associate Members.[3] According to Ram Hiralal,[5] former president of the Suriname Cricket Association,[6][7] up until 2002 when Suriname applied for and gained affiliate membership of the ICC, it was also an associate member of the West Indies Cricket Board.[5]

Member associations edit

Domestic competitions edit

The West Indies' major men's domestic competitions are the Regional Four Day Competition (first-class competition) and the Regional Super50 (List A one-day competition) and more recently the Hero Caribbean Premier League (domestic Twenty20 competition - replacing the Caribbean Twenty20, which in turn replaced the Stanford 20/20 that had been financed and organised by Allen Stanford). Meanwhile, the major women's domestic competitions are the Women's Super50 Cup and the Twenty20 Blaze.

Other CWI domestic competitions include the TCL Under-19 West Indies Challenge (three-day first-class competition), TCL Under-19 West Indies Challenge Limited Overs Series (one-day limited overs competition), CLICO West Indies Under-15 competition and the WIWCF Women's Senior Tournament. One prominent former competition (not originally organized by the WICB) was the Inter-Colonial Tournament.

In the case of the Regional Four Day Competition and the Regional Super50 the following first-class domestic teams participate:

In 1978 Belize had requested (through the then Belize Cricket Association) in a letter to the WICBC to participate in the Shell Shield and the List A competitions, but the WICBC was unable to entertain their request.[8]

For the TCL Under-19 West Indies Challenge (both the first-class and limited overs competitions) it is the Under-19 squads for these teams which participate, while for the CLICO Under-15 West Indies tournament it is the Under-15 squads for these teams which participate. In the 2004 TCL Under-19 Challenge the Under-19 Bermuda cricket team and an Under-19 combined Americas cricket team also took part.

In the women's WIWCF Senior Tournament and the Stanford 20/20 competition the separate components of the Leeward Islands and Windward Islands compete individually. Additionally for the Stanford 20/20 competition teams from outside the West Indies sporting confederation, but within the Caribbean, also compete including the Bahamas, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Cuba (which was barred from competing in 2008 by the US embargo), the Turks and Caicos Islands (both competing in 2008) as well as the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico (announced for the 2009 edition of the Stanford 20/20).

In the Caribbean Premier League there are franchise teams competing, with each franchise currently representing one of the six traditional cricketing territories in the West Indies:

  • Royals - representing Barbados
  • Amazon Warriors - representing Guyana
  • Tallawahs - representing Jamaica
  • Patriots - representing St. Kitts and Nevis, and the rest of the Leeward Islands
  • Kings - representing St. Lucia and the rest of the Windward Islands
  • Knight Riders - representing Trinidad and Tobago

Principals of the West Indies Cricket Board edit

WICB(C) Presidents (men's cricket) edit

WIWCF Presidents edit

  • Carol Whilby-Maxwell

Secretaries / chief executive officers edit

  • Stephen Camacho: 1982–2000
  • Gregory Shillingford: 2000–2002
  • Roger Brathwaite: 2003–2007 (acting from 2002)
  • Bruce Aanensen: 2007–2007
  • Donald Peters: 2007–2009
  • Ernest Hilaire: 2009–2012
  • Michael Muirhead: 2012–2016
  • Johnny Grave: 2017–present

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 July 2018. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  3. ^ a b Patterson Report [1] 21 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine p. 32
  4. ^ Keith A. P. Sandiford in Beckles et al., op. cit., p.30
  5. ^ a b Connelly, Charlie (2014). Wisden - Elk Stopped Play: And Other Tales from Wisden's 'Cricket Round the World'. A&C Black. pp. 130–131. ISBN 978-140-88-3237-0.
  6. ^ Special award for Ram Hiralal
  7. ^ Off The Beaten Track: Burkina Faso, Cote D'Ivore, Lithuania, Suriname, Wallis & Futuna
  8. ^ The West Indies Cricket Annual. Literary Features Limited. 1978. LETTER FROM BELIZE CRICKET ASSOCIATION:- A request from the Belize Cricket Association to participate in the Shell Shield and Benson & Hedges Tournaments could not be entertained at this time {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)

References edit

External links edit

  • Official website  

cricket, west, indies, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, janu. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cricket West Indies news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cricket West Indies CWI is the governing body for cricket in the West Indies a sporting confederation of over a dozen mainly English speaking Caribbean countries and dependencies that once formed the British West Indies It was originally formed in the early 1920s as the West Indies Cricket Board of Control but changed its name to West Indies Cricket Board WICB in 1996 In November 2015 the Board resolved to rename itself as Cricket West Indies as part of a restructuring exercise that would also see the creation of a separate commercial body This rebranding formally occurred in May 2017 Cricket West IndiesSportCricketJurisdictionNationalAbbreviationCWIFounded1920 1920 104 years ago AffiliationInternational Cricket CouncilAffiliation date31 May 1926 1926 05 31 HeadquartersSt John s Antigua and BarbudaPresidentDr Kishore ShallowCEOJohnny GraveVice president s Azim BassarathMen s coachAndre Coley and Daren SammyWomen s coachShane DeitzOther key staffDirector of Cricket Miles BascombeSponsorCG Insurance Betway Blue Waters Castore Kookaburra Masuri Phizz 1 2 ReplacedWest Indies Cricket Board of Control West Indies Cricket BoardOfficial websitewww wbr windiescricket wbr comCWI has been a full member of the International Cricket Council ICC since 1926 It operates the West Indies cricket team and West Indies A cricket team organising Test tours and one day internationals with other teams It also organises domestic cricket in West Indies including the Regional Four Day Competition and the Regional Super50 domestic one day List A competition The CWI has also collaborated with Sir Allen Stanford in the organisation of the domestic Stanford 20 20 competition for the Twenty20 format of cricket Later they created their own Twenty20 league called Caribbean Twenty20 after disbanding Stanford 20 20 In 2013 they created Caribbean Premier League a Professional Twenty20 league CWI s membership includes the six territorial cricket associations of the various countries and territories which contest the West Indies first class and limited overs competition in the Caribbean Each provides two directors in addition to a number of non member directors Two of these associations are themselves multi national boards representing a number of countries and dependencies The president of CWI is Dr Kishore Shallow who replaced Ricky Skerrit in 2023 Johnny Grave is its chief executive officer Since 2005 per an ICC mandate the West Indies Women s Cricket Federation WIWCF has been integrated with CWI The President of the WIWCF is Carol Whilby Maxwell and the Secretary is Michael Seepersaud CWI is charged with aiding regional development of cricket in the Americas region under the ICC s development program Contents 1 History 2 Member associations 3 Domestic competitions 4 Principals of the West Indies Cricket Board 4 1 WICB C Presidents men s cricket 4 2 WIWCF Presidents 4 3 Secretaries chief executive officers 5 See also 6 Notes and references 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Pre 1999 Flag of the West Indies Cricket Board and Team nbsp Flag of the West Indies Cricket Board and Team used until mid 2017From the 1880s onwards there had been no central body to co ordinate the Inter Colonial Tournaments and matches select composite West Indian XIs for tours and against touring sides and to organise the West Indian tours of England Canada and the United States Such organisation as there was was done by an informal coalition of the major clubs in the region 3 West Indian cricketers however had felt the need for the establishment of such an organisation although geography and culture were to make such a task difficult However with the help of one influential Marylebone Cricket Club member R H Mallett the manager of the 1906 and 1923 West Indian tours and future manager of the 1930 31 West Indian tour to Australia representatives of the various territories finally got together and ultimately formed the West Indies Cricket Board of Control The preliminary meeting was in Bridgetown Barbados from which the informal West Indies Cricket Conference was founded in 1926 The West Indies Cricket Conference held its first official meeting on 22 January 1927 at the Bridgetown Club in Barbados attended by Mallett and representatives from the Windward Islands Trinidad and Tobago Barbados and Demerara British Guiana Delegates from Jamaica and the Leeward Islands were invited but unfortunately were unable to attend At this January meeting the delegates present decided to form the West Indies Cricket Board of Control WICBC which would be composed of a president a secretary and two delegates each from Barbados Demerara Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago and one delegate each from the Leeward Islands and Windward Islands The WICBC s first meeting was held on 17 and 18 June 1927 in Port of Spain Trinidad with Harold Austin the former captain of the 1906 and 1923 West Indian tours of England serving as the first president 4 The board as constituted was enlarged in 1982 when the Leeward and Windward Islands were given the same representation as the other full Members The president was appointed by the board at an ordinary general meeting and had to be a person resident in the West Indies who had shown a keen and active interest in West Indies cricket His term of office was for two years and eligible for re election or until his successor was appointed Board members were also thenceforth to be appointed by their Cricket Associations although in British Guiana the Georgetown Cricket Club held this responsibility until 1943 and in Trinidad the Queens Park Oval Club until 1981 when their respective cricket associations were given recognition There was a provision for associate members who would be entitled to attend meetings but not to move resolutions or vote Bermuda and Belize had been the only members in this category prior to their cessation as Associate Members 3 According to Ram Hiralal 5 former president of the Suriname Cricket Association 6 7 up until 2002 when Suriname applied for and gained affiliate membership of the ICC it was also an associate member of the West Indies Cricket Board 5 Member associations edit nbsp Barbados Cricket Association BCA nbsp Guyana Cricket Board GCB nbsp Jamaica Cricket Association JCA nbsp Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board TTCB Leeward Islands Cricket Association LICA itself composed of nbsp Anguilla Cricket Association nbsp Antigua and Barbuda Cricket Association nbsp British Virgin Islands Cricket Association nbsp Montserrat Cricket Association nbsp Nevis Cricket Association for the island of Nevis alone nbsp St Kitts Cricket Association for the island of Saint Kitts alone nbsp St Maarten Cricket Association nbsp United States Virgin Islands Cricket Association Windward Islands Cricket Board of Control WICBC itself composed of nbsp Dominica Cricket Association nbsp Grenada Cricket Association nbsp St Lucia Cricket Association nbsp St Vincent and the Grenadines Cricket AssociationDomestic competitions editThe West Indies major men s domestic competitions are the Regional Four Day Competition first class competition and the Regional Super50 List A one day competition and more recently the Hero Caribbean Premier League domestic Twenty20 competition replacing the Caribbean Twenty20 which in turn replaced the Stanford 20 20 that had been financed and organised by Allen Stanford Meanwhile the major women s domestic competitions are the Women s Super50 Cup and the Twenty20 Blaze Other CWI domestic competitions include the TCL Under 19 West Indies Challenge three day first class competition TCL Under 19 West Indies Challenge Limited Overs Series one day limited overs competition CLICO West Indies Under 15 competition and the WIWCF Women s Senior Tournament One prominent former competition not originally organized by the WICB was the Inter Colonial Tournament In the case of the Regional Four Day Competition and the Regional Super50 the following first class domestic teams participate Barbados cricket team Guyana cricket team Jamaica cricket team Leeward Islands cricket team Windward Islands cricket team Trinidad and Tobago cricket team Combined Campuses and Colleges cricket teamIn 1978 Belize had requested through the then Belize Cricket Association in a letter to the WICBC to participate in the Shell Shield and the List A competitions but the WICBC was unable to entertain their request 8 For the TCL Under 19 West Indies Challenge both the first class and limited overs competitions it is the Under 19 squads for these teams which participate while for the CLICO Under 15 West Indies tournament it is the Under 15 squads for these teams which participate In the 2004 TCL Under 19 Challenge the Under 19 Bermuda cricket team and an Under 19 combined Americas cricket team also took part In the women s WIWCF Senior Tournament and the Stanford 20 20 competition the separate components of the Leeward Islands and Windward Islands compete individually Additionally for the Stanford 20 20 competition teams from outside the West Indies sporting confederation but within the Caribbean also compete including the Bahamas Bermuda the Cayman Islands Cuba which was barred from competing in 2008 by the US embargo the Turks and Caicos Islands both competing in 2008 as well as the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico announced for the 2009 edition of the Stanford 20 20 In the Caribbean Premier League there are franchise teams competing with each franchise currently representing one of the six traditional cricketing territories in the West Indies Royals representing Barbados Amazon Warriors representing Guyana Tallawahs representing Jamaica Patriots representing St Kitts and Nevis and the rest of the Leeward Islands Kings representing St Lucia and the rest of the Windward Islands Knight Riders representing Trinidad and TobagoPrincipals of the West Indies Cricket Board editWICB C Presidents men s cricket edit Sir Harold Austin Laurie Yearwood Fred Grant Karl Nunes 1945 1952 Sir Errol Dos Santos John St Felix Dare 1960 1966 Tom Pierce Robert Cecil Marley Jeffrey Stollmeyer 1974 1981 Allan Rae 1981 1988 Sir Clyde Walcott 1988 1993 Captain Peter Short 1993 1996 Pat Rousseau 1996 2001 Reverend Wes Hall 2001 2003 Teddy Griffith 2003 2005 Ken Gordon 2005 2007 Julian Hunte 2007 2013 Whycliffe Dave Cameron 2013 2019 Ricky Skerritt 2019 2023 Dr Kishore Shallow 2023 presentWIWCF Presidents edit Carol Whilby MaxwellSecretaries chief executive officers edit Stephen Camacho 1982 2000 Gregory Shillingford 2000 2002 Roger Brathwaite 2003 2007 acting from 2002 Bruce Aanensen 2007 2007 Donald Peters 2007 2009 Ernest Hilaire 2009 2012 Michael Muirhead 2012 2016 Johnny Grave 2017 presentSee also editCricket in the West IndiesNotes and references edit Cricket West Indies CWI Our Partners Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Retrieved 27 October 2017 CWI announces Betway as official betting partner Archived from the original on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2018 a b Patterson Report 1 Archived 21 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine p 32 Keith A P Sandiford in Beckles et al op cit p 30 a b Connelly Charlie 2014 Wisden Elk Stopped Play And Other Tales from Wisden s Cricket Round the World A amp C Black pp 130 131 ISBN 978 140 88 3237 0 Special award for Ram Hiralal Off The Beaten Track Burkina Faso Cote D Ivore Lithuania Suriname Wallis amp Futuna The West Indies Cricket Annual Literary Features Limited 1978 LETTER FROM BELIZE CRICKET ASSOCIATION A request from the Belize Cricket Association to participate in the Shell Shield and Benson amp Hedges Tournaments could not be entertained at this time a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help References editMichael Manley A History of West Indies Cricket 1988 revised edition by Donna Symmonds London Andre Deutsch 2002 ISBN 023305037X Hilary Beckles et al A Spirit of Dominance Cricket and Nationalism in the West Indies Essays in Honour of Viv Richards on the 21st Anniversary of His Test Debut Canoe Press 1998 ISBN 976 8125 37 3 Cricket West Indies http www thehindu com sport cricket West Indies Cricket Board renamed rebrands itself article17041097 eceExternal links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cricket West Indies amp oldid 1191116856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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