Dave Cameron's controversial reign as the Cricket West
Indies president has finally come an end after six years. Pitted against just
one challenger, former West Indies team manager Ricky Skerritt, Cameron lost by
an 8-4 margin after the elections were conducted through a secret ballot on
Sunday.
Emmanuel Nanthan, who was also standing for a fourth term as
Cameron's deputy, was beaten by the same margin by Kishore Shallow, an
entrepreneur and president of the St Vincent & The Grenadines Cricket
Association. Both Skerritt, who is 62, and Shallow, 35, are also CWI directors.
Cameron had to swallow the embarrassment of defeat on home
turf - he is understood to have moved the CWI annual general meeting to
Jamaica. The turnaround might have come as a shock for Cameron, who was part of
the CWI for 17 years, and took charge as board president in March 2013
replacing Julien Hunte, before which he was a vice-president of the board.
Cameron served in the president's seat for three terms.
Incidentally, when the nominations for the elections were
closed on February 24, Cameron and Nanthan were nominated twice: by the
Windward Islands Cricket Board of Control (WICBC) and seconded by the Guyana
Cricket Board (GCB), with the second hand of backing coming from his native
Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA), subsequently seconded by the Barbados
Cricket Association (BCA).
The opposition camp of Skerritt and Shallow were nominated
by the Leeward Islands Cricket Board (LICB) and seconded by the Trinidad and
Tobago Cricket Board (TTCB).
ESPNcricinfo understands that before the elections began on
Sunday, one of the two representatives from TTCB raised a motion to conduct the
voting through a secret ballot. It received majority support, thus deepening
the mystery over who exactly voted for Cameron or Skerritt.
Each of the six territorial boards (JCA, BCA, WICB, LICB,
TTCB and GCA) had two votes each, and the votes can be cast by two
representatives nominated by each of the territorial boards.
In a brief statement issued by CWI, both Skerritt and
Shallow said they were "humbled" by the victory. While Skerritt said
the new administration would "pledge to work for improvement on and off
the field for West Indies cricket", Shallow claimed the change of guard
was a "victory for West Indies cricket".
On February 21, Skerritt announced his intention to
challenge the Cameron administration, motivated primarily to nip the latter's
plan to "implement sweeping changes to the democratic process of
decision-making" in Caribbean cricket. Skerritt said Cameron's desire to
take "executive control" was "troubling".
"His desire to lead CWI as a full-time executive, is
not reflective of the West Indies cricket ethos," Skerritt and Shallow had
said in an inaugural email to launch their campaign. "By advancing his
plans for an autocratic leadership structure, which marginalises the role of
commercially recruited executives, the incumbent has placed his personal
thinking diametrically opposed to the values of West Indies cricket."
Dave Cameron (L) and Emmanuel Nanthan, the outgoing CWI president and vice-president |
In a parting note, issued by CWI, Cameron and Nanthan noted
the board members had "trusted" them to "safeguard" the
West Indies team, "the region's most valuable asset".
Listing some of their achievements, the pair said they were
"happy" to be leaving having handed contracts to 123 players,
creating a "home" for the board at Coolidge Cricket Grounds in
Antigua, overseeing West Indies men's team winning the recent Test series against
England at home and the "world championships" which included the twin
men's World T20s titles which Darren Sammy's team won in 2012 and 2016 as well
as the women's World T20 and Under-19 World Cup in 2016.
"More than anything else we have a fit youthful team
that is prepared to face the world," Cameron and Nanthan said in the
statement.
It remains to be seen, though, whether the players,
especially some of the senior ones like Sammy, would agree with Cameron's
self-appraisal. Sammy is among several senior West Indies players who have had
fallouts with Cameron. The biggest player revolt against Cameron took place in
2014 when Dwayne Bravo and his squad decided to abandon the tour of India over
contractual disputes with CWI.
Cameron also played a big role in the suspension and
eventual sacking of head coach Phil Simmons in 2016 under controversial
circumstances. Simmons, who is currently Afghanistan coach, has claimed damages
worth more than US $300,000. Simmons said he was seeking damages for constructive
dismissal.
More recently, Cameron played a big hand in getting Richard
Pybus as the interim head coach at least until August, a period that
encompasses the 2019 World Cup and India's visit to the Caribbean. His
appointment came in the wake of Stuart Law leaving the position last December,
despite his contract being till the upcoming World Cup, which will be held from
May to July.
Pybus, who was West Indies' high-performance director, has
never been popular in the Caribbean, with former West Indies opener Desmond
Haynes publicly asking Cameron whether the job had been advertised
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