West Indies has hit rock bottom, says Viv

NEW DELHI,  (Reuters) – Cricketing great Viv Richards  feels the game has hit rock bottom in the West Indies and  lashed out at the board for ostracising former players,  preventing them from helping revive the Caribbean’s glorious  past.

The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) requires the “right  opinion” from former cricketers to help cricket move forward in  the West Indies, Richard told Reuters in an interview.

“I think cricket is at its lowest tier at the moment in the  Caribbean. It’s not in a healthy state. Lots of work needs to  be done to get it to the right prominence and to where folks  would believe where we should be at,” Richards said.

The West Indian, the most destructive batsman of his era,  fumed when asked about the role of former players in cricket’s  revival.
“I am not at all involved in West Indian cricket. Most of  the former players have been ostracised. Constructive criticism  is not much accepted in the Caribbean,” the 58-year old said.

“I would love to take a role like Greg Chappell did for  Australia. I think I have a good eye for talent and this is  something that we have never taken on board in the Caribbean.”

Former Australian captain Chappell was the head coach at  Australia’s Centre of Excellence before taking on a new role as  Australia’s first full-time selector and national talent  development head last month.

“It doesn’t smell that good when you have a board dictated  to by the players’ association. The future of West Indies  cricket is certainly in doubt in my opinion,” said Richards,  who is in Delhi as an ambassador for the Antigua and Barbuda  delegation in the Commonwealth Games.

Richards, who hit 24 hundreds in 121 tests in the glory  days of Caribbean cricket, feels the longer version of the game  still brings forth the best talent in the game.

He was all praise for the quality of cricket played during  India’s thrilling win against Australia earlier this week.
“The test match… and the finish … that’s cricket for me  at its very best. This format sorts the good ones out from the  bad ones,” he said.

The West Indian, who had a strike rate of over 90 in  one-day cricket, picked Australia captain Ricky Ponting as the  most aggressive batsman in the current era but India’s Sachin  Tendulkar got his vote for the best batsman.

“Ricky Ponting is the most aggressive for me … I have  always liked his aggression. But the role Sachin is playing for  India … that’s batsmanship at its very best for me,” he went  on.

“The things Sachin is doing now and the way he did them in  the past are two completely different chapters in his career.  He is the eldest statesman where batting is concerned.”

The former West Indian captain was clueless about how the  spot fixing menace had made its way into modern day cricket.
“I would like to think the salaries are good enough these  days. If you get to a level and get recognised, you can play in  tournaments like the Indian Premier League,” Richards said,  with a wry smile.

Spot fixing has emerged as the latest threat to the  integrity of cricket after the match-fixing scandal which  rocked the game 10 years ago.

He was dead serious when he said that no bookie could have  approached him for throwing a match away.
“It could have been around during my time. But I was pretty  much solid and no one could have come to me and asked me to  chuck a match,” he boasted.

“My pride and my country’s pride would have been at stake.  That meant a lot more to me than maybe a few dollars and  cents.”