Ignoring Chanderpaul will be a huge blunder

By Orin Davidson

This is not the time for grandstanding by anyone,  be it players, board officials or selectors.

Guyana’s qualification for the Airtel Champions League Twenty20 cricket  championship was due to the collective effort of all the stakeholders involved.

Thus , the achievement ought not get to anyone’s  heads, lest Guyana’s chances for success in South Africa be marginalized.

Which is why the national selectors should do the right thing and select the strongest  Guyana team possible for this  assignment of utmost  importance next month.

The final touring team has not yet been determined , but already there are suggestions that stipulations would prevent specific players from making the cut.

Chief selector Claude Raphael was recently quoted, stating that players not included in the original list including  standbys,  for the West Indies Twenty20 championship,  are likely to be ineligible  for the Airtel Champions League.

If such is the policy, it is where the first wrong steps will be made and  which will kill the team’s chances of having its best squad  to represent  the country .

Guyana’s most illustrious active player Shivnarine Chanderpaul was not included in that list as he chose to play in the English County Championships instead.

Rajendra Chandrika also was unavailable because he was attending the West Indies Cricket Board’s High Performance Center’s training programme. So was Veerasammy Permaul. If as a result these players are made ineligible, it smacks of  excessive authority  by the selectors that could do more harm than good to Guyana’s chances.

In Chanderpaul’s case he made an unpopular decision to play for Lancashire instead, but it does not mean he should be penalized,  after 19 years distinguished service to his country. These are  modern times that  have long transformed sport  into  a business  for  its participants  and  cricketers are no exception.

Chanderpaul obviously stood to earn much more money playing for Lancashire and he went for it, an act that has become the norm rather than the exception these days for  modern day professionals.

And for players of Chanderpaul’s  status and age it  is a  no- brainer.

At 36 years of age the Guyanese is at the sunset of a career that will end sooner rather than later. Thus the first priority of players in his situation  is to maximize their earnings to the hilt, and in Chanderpaul’s case, his  is a special one because of other factors  which may have contributed to his decision.  After dedicating a life time to a sports discipline you don’t expect  sportspeople  to start life all over again after retirement.

So, the selectors have to understand  that the  old days of  amateurism  and  unequivocal loyalty to national teams which  comprised of  merely one  national competition per year for Guyanese players, are long gone.

Regional  players have to deal with thrice that number of  territorial  competitions presently  and if Chanderpaul forsakes one, it is not a criminal act.

His   behaviour is not even close to  the heinous  self serving, manipulative acts  performed by professional  sports people in America and Europe  on teams all the time, to earn maximum money.

Right here in the West indies, Keiron Pollard chose  to play for Somerset in the said English county championships instead of representing the West  Indies ` A’  team.  And  there  was  no talk of  any sanction.

In an age when international  sports ruling bodies are constantly  changing the rules to allow countries to select competitors with merely the faintest of links to give them  the strongest  representation possible at world competitions,  the thinking of the GCB selectors is archaic and out of place. Thus,  Chanderpaul ought to be in the Guyana team where  his accomplishments  and experience would be a big asset to  its  chances for success in South Africa.

With more than five tours under his belt there,  Shiv’s  knowledge of the vastly  alien  South African conditions  would be invaluable for the  Guyana lineup, most of who have never played outside of the West Indies.   And forget any argument  of  his  game not being  suited for T20 cricket which is  all about fast scoring. Lest anyone forget he is the scorer of the third fastest Test century ever made in a mere 69 balls. He has been involved in many acts of ferocious scoring for West Indies at the top, middle and bottom  of the order.

The 16 runs he plundered off  one over against New Zealand in St Vincent to win the fifth game and One Day International series in 2002 readily comes to mind.  The 149-run 136- ball classic off India in Nagpur is another,  and only  the critics with short memory will forget the many exhilarating opening partnerships he fashioned with Chris  Gayle  at the top of the order for West Indies  including  the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy series.

Also, Chanderpaul’s batting is not all he has to offer, as his fielding is so exemplary being second to none in the entire West Indies squad.  Imagine the boost it will bring to the Guyana line in a scenario  where fielding  is of utmost importance  in the shortest form of the game.

The  West Indies selectors did not make him  the team’s  T20 opening batsman for nothing other than his ability at the crease and in the outfield.

Guyana captain  Ramnaresh Sarwan  knew all of this before he called for Chanderpaul’s selection just after winning the CT20 final.

In previewing the Champions League, a few days later,  former India captain Sourav Ganguly, did not give a vague overview of Guyana’s chances. He specifically mentioned  Chanderpaul as one of the country’s best players ever.

The left-hander of  126 Tests and 261 ODIs experience,   can adjust to any type of attacking game needed .  He has done it against all types of opposition  and conditions  and it will be a gross injustice to the Guyana team and the Guyanese people  if a less accomplished player is selected instead. The cases of the two High Performance Center  players are   somewhat  different to Chanderpaul’s but no less compelling. They  were unavailable for the CT20  series  for reasons  beyond  their control  and deserved to be considered for selection.

More so in the case of Chandrika, a batsman with a natural flair for aggressive stroke play.    He   already has  proven  his class  at international level  by spearheading  Guyana to victory over  Trinidad and Tobago, the regining  Champions League runners-up at the time,  in the  Haiti earthquake T20 fund  raising game in the Twin Island republic earlier this year. It was an innings described as a “vicious assault” on the T&T bowlers   by the Trinidad Express newspaper.

With  these factors in mind the national selectors  must rethink their policy with level-headed thinking and understand that this massive assignment in South Africa is not about them  and the authority they hold.  Rather, it  is  all about the Guyanese fans and  the  benefits to the nation, which can only be acquired with the strongest team being selected. By the time the Champions League starts,  Lancashire will still have a handful of four-day and 40 overs games  left to complete  their  county season.

It means the selectors or Guyana Board will do well to start negotiating for Chanderpaul’s release.

The selection panel  did an excellent  job  in  determining  the  team  for the CT20 series.

But they could  tarnish it with needless  regulations  for the much bigger challenge next month.