Matches (15)
IPL (2)
Pakistan vs New Zealand (1)
WT20 Qualifier (4)
County DIV1 (4)
County DIV2 (3)
PAK v WI [W] (1)
Tony Cozier

WICB shoddy in timing of Gibson's exit

The board had more than five weeks to look for a new coach, and at the start of a new home series, a successor hasn't been identified

Tony Cozier
Tony Cozier
21-Aug-2014
There was confusion within the WICB itself over whether Ottis Gibson would be in charge for the Bangladesh series  •  WICB Media

There was confusion within the WICB itself over whether Ottis Gibson would be in charge for the Bangladesh series  •  WICB Media

The procrastination typical of the West Indies Cricket Board has left the team without a head coach for a home series against Bangladesh that should be ideal preparation ahead of the tough away assignments against India and South Africa and the World Cup.
It had five and a half weeks after the last international engagement, against New Zealand in the Caribbean in June and July, in which to remove the coach Ottis Gibson after four undistinguished years in the post and give his replacement the two Tests, three ODIs and one T20 against the lowly Bangladeshis to settle in. Twelve days earlier, it had changed its selection panel, making Clive Lloyd, the iconic captain of the '70s and '80s, chairman, and including Courtney Walsh, West Indies' leading wicket-taker.
In Gibson's case, the board waited until a day before the opening match, Wednesday's ODI in Grenada, to acknowledge that the two had "mutually agreed to terminate their association with immediate effect". By then, it was already a widely known fact.
The upshot has been the unsatisfactory situation of the team manager, former captain Richie Richardson, pressed into doubling up as interim coach until there is a permanent appointment. That in itself has inevitably created unhelpful speculation over who that might be.
The delay was accompanied by the ambiguity and confusion that are other hallmarks of the way the WICB conducts its affairs.
Given West Indies' dismal record under him (a win-loss ratio of 9-16 in 29 Tests, 36-48 in 90 ODIs, 22-21 in 45 T20Is), Gibson's eventual exit was coming for some time; it was widely predicted after the heavy defeats in India and New Zealand late last year and the later 2-1 loss in the home Tests to New Zealand.
It was obvious by his absence as the team assembled in Grenada on Sunday, three days prior to the opening match against Bangladesh, that his time was up.
That's where the familiar double-speak kicked in.
If Pybus does put Arthur's name forward, it would be a complete contradiction of his comments contained in his report to the WICB in March
Immediately, the board's marketing and communications manager, Imran Khan, asserted that Gibson was still head coach, adding the puzzling rider that an announcement "in relation to a number of changes" would be made the next day.
When none was forthcoming, the media called the WICB president Dave Cameron for clarification. He acknowledged that Gibson was, indeed, not in Grenada, as anyone interested could tell him. He added that he could "neither confirm nor deny" reports that Gibson had been fired.
Late Tuesday, the terse announcement finally came from the board that Gibson was no longer the head coach. Newspaper headlines reflected the perplexity.
The Barbados Nation's headlines on successive days were "Still Gibson", "Gibson gone?" and, the finality, "Gibson gone". The London-based Times carried the story under the banner "Gibson walks out on West Indies". The Stabroek News of Guyana took the middle road, "Gibson, WICB sever ties". It is still not known whether or not Gibson walked before he was pushed.
So while the well-travelled 45-year-old Barbadian moves on, the hunt is on for a new man to take charge.
One Trinidad newspaper wrote that Richard Pybus, the Englishman appointed the WICB's director of cricket, will make the recommendation. It reported that he had already met with Mickey Arthur, the South African dismissed as Australia's coach last year, making him the frontrunner. Arthur was one of the five overseas coaches in the recently concluded Caribbean Premier League.
If Pybus does put Arthur's name forward, it would be a complete contradiction of his comments contained in his report to the WICB in March.
"The introduction of coaches from other cricket cultures (the Australians Bennett King and John Dyson were West Indies head coaches between 2004 and 2010), and players having single rooms on tour, brought about changes in the team culture that manifested in a breaking down of the natural handing on of Caribbean cricket wisdom, senior player to junior player," he wrote.
"Informal coaching by elite cricketers was replaced by formal coaching from an alien culture with a different values system… Confusion over the natural Caribbean way of playing and coaching emerged."
The WICB has not confirmed or denied whether it would again turn to "formal coaching from an alien culture with a different values system".

Tony Cozier has written about and commentated on cricket in the Caribbean for 50 years