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Arthur
remains in SA selection panel
DURBAN—Gerald Majola, the chief executive of Cricket South Africa (CSA),
has confirmed Mickey Arthur, the South African coach, cannot be axed
from the national selection panel as he is under a contract.
The board’s general council,which reaffirmed its stand on the
transformation policy, had “removed” Arthur from the panel on Saturday.
However, only the board’s professional arm, headed by Majola, had the
power to remove him. “Mickey Arthur is contracted by Cricket South
Africa (Pty) Ltd, and his contracted duties include being a national
selector,” Majola said in a statement. “Only the board of directors of
CSA (Pty) Ltd can change this, and therefore the resolution taken at
General Council’s teleconference on Saturday to remove Mr Arthur from
the selection process is unconstitutional.
“I have been in contact today (Sunday) with the convenor of selectors,
Joubert Strydom, and have informed him that the same selection panel
will finalise the team to tour Bangladesh. The panel comprises Joubert
Strydom (convener), Mickey Arthur (national coach), Vincent Barnes
(assistant national coach), Graeme Smith (captain), Mustapha Khan
(selector) and Shafiek Abrahams (selector). The team will be announced
tomorrow (Monday) after three players have undergone fitness tests,
namely Hashim Amla, Andre Nel, and Neil McKenzie.” With any luck, Arthur
and Norman Arendse, the CSA president with whom he has been having a
running battle, will bump into each other in a deserted parking lot
sometime soon. Maybe then, with no one watching and nothing more lethal
than a pair of jabbing index fingers, we might get to the bottom of this
week of Monty Python mayhem. Until then, let’s try and make sense of
what has happened.
On Tuesday Arendse rejected the squad selected for South Africa’s
imminent tour to Bangladesh. He did so, we believe, on the grounds that
only four black players were included in the squad and not seven as
called for in terms of CSA’s plan for the ongoing racial transformation
the game. It doesn’t matter if we euphemise that bit of legislation as a
policy or a target: what matters is the number. And that number is
seven. Four isn’t even close. Where was Herschelle Gibbs in the wake of
his spectacular century in the last one-day international against West
Indies, Arendse wondered. And didn’t Monde Zondeki deserve some
recognition for the 54 wickets he took in 10 SuperSport Series matches
this season? Both are black, which would leave us just one short of the
required number. Arthur countered with a similarly sharp perspective.
The South Africans return home briefly from Bangladesh before returning
to the subcontinent for what is sure to be a challenging series against
India. Arthur wanted his best team on the field in Bangladesh to ensure
they hit the ground running when they encountered the big brothers next
door.
Arendse countered that, with a lengthy tour of England looming after the
Indian venture, South Africa needed to find out whether players like
Zondeki - and other bowlers - were up to international standard.
At this point, non-South African readers might wonder what all the fuss
has been about. Even allowing for what in other countries would be the
novelty of a racially based selection policy, this is the stuff of the
average committee meeting, surely. Why all the acrimony?
The upshot was that Arendse laid disciplinary charges against Arthur,
who duly fired back a salvo of charges of his own against the
president.—Agencies |