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Topics - rotatopoti3

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91
General Discussion / I dont understand....
« on: February 28, 2011, 06:57:19 AM »
We are seeing a wave for change in North Africa from Tunisia,Egypt and soon to be Libya...with Yemen, Saudi,Bahrain and Iran knocking closeby.....


Although I agree a leader shouldnt have control for 40 years......


We are seeing Western pressure to get rid of their leaders whom they refer to as Dictators. Is it me or is this Western Imperialism at its finest.......

Will we see the same of Chavez, Castro and Kim Jung Il before the year is over?

92
Cricket Anyone / WI vs Netherlands..
« on: February 28, 2011, 02:48:40 AM »
Ah predicting we get cutass.....prove me that you are not considered an Associate team

93
Football / EPL team to buy?
« on: February 14, 2011, 02:47:31 AM »
We are seeing many investors domestic and internationally wanting to purchase a Premier League team.  We have seen Chelsea, Manchester City, Manu and Liverpool and several others.

If you were a shrewd investor, which team would you purchase and why? Interested to get some intelligent feedback

94
General Discussion / Sharma: Lee Sing breaking the law
« on: February 06, 2011, 11:43:25 PM »
DRIVERS fined $1,300 for violating parking restrictions in the vicinity of Port of Spain may be entitled to compensation.

This was revealed by Local Government Minister Chandresh Sharma during a telephone interview with the Express yesterday when he said "those wrecked illegally will have to be compensated depending on the reasons why they were wrecked and if there was any damage to their vehicles".

Sharma said the recent activities of Port of Spain Mayor Louis Lee Sing "are outside of the law" since under the Motor Vehicle and Road Traffic Act the Corporation is not allowed to charge more than $500 for vehicles violating parking restrictions.

"I am not sure under which law the mayor is doing this, but he is really beginning to become an embarrassment now because as I understand, it was not a Council decision".

Late last month, Lee Sing embarked on an impounding exercise that would have irresponsible motorists–who would have parked on the pavement or in front of people's driveway–pay for the city's damaged pavements, especially within the Woodbrook, St James and Ariapita Avenue areas.

Sharma, however, said over the weekend he was in the Woodbrook area and witnessed cars being wrecked although they had not been in violation of any parking laws.

"I am hoping to meet with the mayor (today) to discuss this exercise, once he attends the meeting I called with him, but we have to discuss this as it has gotten out of hand".

In her Express column questioning the impounding of the cars last Saturday, former independent senator Dana Seetahal SC said she checked several laws and nothing indicated to her that the mayor had right to charge motorists $1,300.

In fact, she said under the Motor Vehicle Road Traffic Act, section 108, police are allowed to remove a vehicle parked in breach of the traffic laws where the owner cannot be found or refuses to move it.

A constable may take the vehicle to a place of "safe custody" usually by towing it. In order to have the vehicle released the owner must pay the sum of $300 in removal charges and $200 for custody of the vehicle: total $500. If not paid within 30 days the vehicle may then be sold by public auction.

When contacted about the matter, Lee Sing said he was not acting illegally. .He said the costs were "administrative costs associated with the impounding of the vehicles" and not fines or penalties

"People have gotten so accustomed to breaking the law that when asked not to break the law they have a problem with it...but we at the Corporation have taken a vow to protect our pavements and that's what we are doing," he said.

$1300-$500 = $800  Administrative cost ???

96
General Discussion / Boy, 4, Victim Of Attempted Robbery On Long Island
« on: December 15, 2010, 10:13:05 AM »
December 15, 2010 10:47 AM

Reporting Sophia Hall

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (WCBS 880) — A little boy was injured after becoming the victim of an attempted robbery, WCBS 880′s Sophia Hall reports.

Authorities say it happened inside the Choice Pharmacy in Hempstead, Long Island, when the four-year-old boy was standing with his mother.

When the mom turned her back, 17-year-old Dominique Mack attacked, police said. She started grabbing at the gold chain the child was wearing.

The attempts to steal the chain were so forceful the boy was nearly lifted off his feet.

When the child started crying, the teen left the store. She was later arrested.

The little boy’s neck swelled and was red after the attack.

Why would you have your 4 yr old child wearing a gold chain??

97
Football / FIFA CODE PERTAINING TO GOV'T INVOLVEMENT!
« on: December 14, 2010, 10:01:42 AM »
One of FIFA laws state that governments should not be involved in administration of the football federation.  Can we then argue that Mr.Warner (being part of govt) is involved in the running of your football and that this is illegal under FIFA rules?

98
Football / Cantona cash withdrawal protest irks EU finance leaders
« on: December 07, 2010, 05:08:15 AM »
A call by French ex-footballer Eric Cantona for people to punish banks by withdrawing all their cash has been condemned by EU ministers.

Cantona went online to call for customers to empty their accounts on Tuesday in a "revolution" against a "corrupt, criminal" banking system.

He is said to have at least 38,000 supporters in France and elsewhere.

Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the Eurogroup of finance ministers, said the idea was "totally irresponsible".

Cantona, an icon from his days at Manchester United, said in a video posted online: "The three million people in the street, they go to the bank, withdraw their money, and the banks collapse.

"That's a real threat, there's a real revolution."

His appeal has spread through Facebook and YouTube.

Mr Juncker, prime minister of Luxembourg, said in response: "I have various feelings towards the financial sector but I find the operation you are referring to totally irresponsible."

Joining the condemnation, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde remarked that citizens "do not have the savings he has".

Olli Rehn, the EU's powerful economic affairs commissioner and himself a former director of a Finnish first division club, said he considered himself a Man United fan.

But he added: "I think Mr Cantona is a better footballer than he is an economist."

99
Football / Gullit conducts coaching clinic
« on: September 17, 2010, 05:29:57 PM »
Dutch football legend Ruud Gullit will conduct a coaching clinic here in Trinidad and Tobago, starting tomorrow.

The Former AC Milan star, now president of the Joint Holland/Belgium 2018 & 2022 World Cup Bid Team, will share his knowledge of the beautiful game with 24 local coaches. The course is being hosted by the Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (T&TFF).

The opening ceremony is scheduled for 8.30 tomorrow morning, at the Ken Galt Hall, Center of Excellence, Macoya.

100
Chinese restaurant closed
'Questionable meat' on the menu
By Joel Julien joel.julien@trinidadexpress.com

A CHINESE restaurant in Curepe has been shut down by public health officials for having "droppings and certain types of questionable meat" on its menu.

The Hong Kong Chinese Restaurant, located at the corner of the Southern Main Road and Evans Street, was shut down by health officials, deputy chairman of the Tunapuna Piarco Regional Corporation, Rosanna Sookdeo, said yesterday.

The unsanitary condition of the restaurant is an issue the corporation has been dealing with for the past few months, Sookdeo said.

"The corporation had its health meeting and we decided to order an investigation into the restaurant because we have received numerous complaints from people in the area," Sookdeo, the councillor for the area, said.

"Persons have been calling the corporation complaining about rats and other unsanitary conditions outside the restaurant. We have been receiving these complaints for quite some time and we decided to investigate these complaints."

Sookdeo said public health officers along with municipal police went to the restaurant and took several food samples. The food samples were then taken to a lab to be analysed. The lab tests showed there were "droppings and certain types of questionable meat" in the food samples, she said.

A team of public health officers spearheaded by Imran Khan moved to shut the restaurant down following the lab tests, Sookdeo said as she sounded a warning to all food outlets with sub-standard sanitary conditions.

"We are trying to ensure our corporation is the best it can be and we will not tolerate any unsanitary conditions for places where people go to eat," Sookdeo said.

101
Mayor Lee Sing is asking for $300.6M for Port-of-Spain

By GARY DARMANIE Wednesday, August 25 2010

Mayor of Port-of-Spain Louis Lee Sing is asking for $300.6 million to fulfil mandates for construction and maintenance works in the nation’s capital.

Speaking Monday at City Hall, Lee Sing presented the Budget proposals for the upcoming 2010/2011 fiscal year.

Lee Sing showed statistics suggesting the City Corporation has been underfunded for the past five years. He said the Corporation expects expenditure to total $300,629,254. He said they would be requesting $296.8 million from Government, and is expected to bring in $4.8 million from activities in the city.

Lee Sing said the expenditure would include recurrent costs, which include personnel costs, minor equipment and goods and services used.

Developmental costs would include the construction of drains, pavements and parks.

Lee Sing said he would also be taking a “zero tolerance” policy on the vending of market produce on Charlotte Street.

He said the sale of all vegetables and meats would now take place at the PoS Central Market.

Lee Sing also warned members of the public to stop feeding vagrants in the nation’s capital.

He said feeding the vagrants encouraged poor sanitation in the city as the vagrants would usually leave empty boxes, littering the streets and sidewalks. He said many vagrants were also defecating in public, making the city even nastier.

Lee Sing also said he intends to hold discussions with the Downtown Owners and Merchants Association (DOMA) and controllers of banks on provision of public facilities.

Lee Sing said he wanted to have business places as well as banks provide bathroom facilities for customers as such facilities are characteristic of large developed-nation cities.

DOMA president, Gregory Aboud yesterday supported the move to have bathroom facilities for customers installed at institutions and business places in the city.

“The public has been concerned about non-availability of bathroom facilities, particularly in institutions and businesses where there are long waiting lines. We feel the process of inclusion should begin with the Town and Country Planning Division, which could require public facilities in all new buildings,” said Aboud.

102
Cricket Anyone / WICB claims WIPA misinformation
« on: August 24, 2010, 11:39:55 PM »
WICB claims WIPA misinformation  Guardian
Published: 25 Aug 2010

The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) yesterday accused the West Indies Players Association (WIPA) of misinformation and stymieing the arbitration process, in its bid to settle the matters of players’ image rights. On Saturday, the WICB questioned WIPA’s rejection of the offer by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and the Federation of International Cricketers Association (FICA) to help facilitate a final resolution to the matter which is currently the subject of arbitration. The Board also called on the players’ body to act in the best interest of the game by dealing in a fair and balanced manner and to avoid an antagonistic approach to resolving the issue.

In its response, WIPA referred to an agreement between both parties last October, and the recommendations of the Caricom Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee last September and said it was willing to submit to the decision of the panel appointed by Caricom. It said the Board appeared to be having second thoughts on the agreement. The WICB release yesterday said the joint ICC/FICA proposal was not meant to supersede or replace the CARICOM initiated arbitration. “It was meant to run parallel to it and WIPA was fully aware of this as communicated to it by both FICA and ICC.” It further noted that the joint ICC/FICA proposal would have offered a framework – based on how other ICC full members had resolved similar issues to the satisfaction of all parties—for settling the specific issue of image rights and intellectual property. “It was made very clear that if the framework was not accepted then the process of arbitration would continue.” It continued: “For an arbitration to be deemed binding, the parties – in this case WICB and WIPA – must agree that they would be bound by the judgment.

Similarly, had WIPA not rejected the joint ICC/FICA proposal and along with the WICB, agree to be bound by the decisions therein, it would have been binding on both parties. For WIPA to skew the facts to suggest that the joint ICC/FICA intervention could not have led to a binding agreement is disingenuous.” The WICB release noted the Board remained fully committed to the arbitration process. “In fact, further to the CARICOM Agreement both parties—through the New York Agreement—agreed on the details of the way forward for the arbitration process. The New York Agreement clearly states that the process would have been completed by December 2009. In this regard, WIPA’s procrastination has resulted in WIPA being in breach of the New York Agreement. “Therefore WICB also notes, with interest, WIPA’s assertion that the arbitration is “due to be heard shortly before a panel of distinguished Caribbean jurists.”

The Board said it was taken aback by this statement as it was not aware that a date was set for the arbitration hearing. “The truth is WIPA’s delaying tactics stymied any chance of an agreement—by the December 2009 date as outlined in the New York Agreement—on the terms of reference for the arbitration.” It said the WICB has been at pains to seek WIPA’s agreement on a meeting of both parties to progress the matter, but WIPA has been non-committal. “Critically, the WICB is proud of the fact that it has honoured every single commitment in the New York Agreement. The WICB said it had paid the legal fees as agreed and has paid the US $450,000 of which Dinanath Ramnarine received US$150,000. “WICB has paid all injury payments to players and has signed retainer contracts as of October 2009 to September 30, 2010 in accordance with the player rankings. The WICB called on WIPA to work together for the good of West Indies cricket.

103
General Discussion / Bandits beat boy for Play Whe winnings
« on: August 23, 2010, 12:24:19 AM »
Bandits beat boy for Play Whe winnings

By Cecily Asson Monday, August 23 2010 Newsday

A nine-year-old Morne Diablo schoolboy was planassed (beaten with flat side of cutlass) several times during a robbery at his grandmother’s home on Saturday night after he refused to tell them where he hid $540 his grandmother won in Play Whe earlier that day.

The bandits, relatives said, also wanted to know where the boy hid $480 another relative had left with his grandmother for safe keeping.

In what they described yesterday as a reign of terror by four armed and masked men, who stormed the house demanding money from Zion Ellis, nine, of Quarry Road, Morne Diablo, Penal. Zion was planassed several times about the body — his cousin Boysie Jacob, 29, was stabbed five times in the back and neck and is now warded in serious condition at the San Fernando General Hospital. He suffered a punctured lung, a relative said.

Zion’s ailing grandmother, Marlene Cooper, 45, was beaten in the chest with a standing fan when she failed to co-operate with the bandits. The bandits ransacked the three-bedroom house in search of the money. Relatives said they found it hidden in a jacket pocket.

A police report stated at about 11.45 pm on Saturday four masked men armed with cutlasses went to Cooper’s house at Quarry Street where they kicked down the front bedroom door and demanded money. The men grabbed the boy off his bed and began beating him when he refused to talk. Jacob and Cooper were awakened by the noise. Police said a struggle ensued between Jacob and the bandits and he was stabbed. Cooper was struck in the chest when she intervened. The bandits ransacked the house before escaping through a back door and into a waiting vehicle. They escaped with $1,020 cash, silver coins, cigarettes and a piece of cheese. A report was made to the Penal Police Station and officers have since held a suspect believed to be the driver of the getaway car. A black Wingroad vehicle has been impounded. Police say they are searching for four suspects who are known to the family.

When Newsday visited the family yesterday, the steps leading to the house, the wooden gallery floor, and the floor length curtain were all stained with blood. The sheet on Jacob’s bed was also covered in blood.

Several louvre panes were smashed during the struggle between Jacob and the bandits.

Katisha Ellis, 29, who lives next door to her mother told Newsday that her son has not been himself since the experience. Ellis’s head, back and arms bore slight bruises from the beating.

She said the men knew that they had money in the house and that Zion was the one who secured the money for his grandmother.

She said, “To know that these fellas lime here — eat and drink here that do this to my son, it real hard. They real planasse the boy because he wouldn’t tell them where the money is.”

104
Cricket Anyone / WICB wants Guyana’s money
« on: August 05, 2010, 09:45:28 PM »
WICB wants Guyana’s money
Guardian

The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) has requested 33 per cent of the participation fees which the Guyana Cricket Board (GCB) will receive for taking part in next month’s Airtel Champions League in South Africa. Guyana stands to gain US$500,000 as an entry fee to the tournament and of this the WICB wants 33 percent (US$165,000) with the GCB getting 17 per cent (US)$85,000 and the players getting 50 per cent (US$250,000). This has forced a delay in the signing of the draft agreement between the GCB and the West Indies Players Association as the GCB is reportedly upset because of the WICB’s demand. On Sunday the Guyanese players signed their participation contract, pending the Guyana Cricket Board (GCB) negotiating the terms and conditions with WIPA.

A highly placed source told the Trinidad Guardian yesterday, the Guyana Cricket Board had some issues with the monetary allocation and this is what delayed the signing of the participation contracts. However, a deal was struck between the GCB and the players and the GCB then agreed to meet with WIPA to discuss the final terms and conditions. According to the source: “The GCB then contacted WIPA and within a day a draft contract was sent back to the GCB and they had until Wednesday 5 PM to sign off on it. However, this deadline passed and up until now they had not contacted WIPA.” The contract drawn up by WIPA for the players will result in the players and the respective board sharing the participation fee 50-50. They will then share the prize money 75-25 with the players getting the larger share.

Trinidad and Tobago’s players signed off on their contracts and president of the board Azim Bassarath said yesterday that this is the percentage agreed to by the TTCB and the Trinidad players. According to Bassarath: “We were sent a proposal from WIPA and after looking at it we found it reasonable and hence the players and the board signed off on it. I found the negotiation process with WIPA to be very professional and we had no problems at all.” If they cannot settle the issues, the WICB would have no choice but to go to Barbados and if they cannot meet their demands, then the next team in line is Trinidad and Tobago, who represented the region last time around in India.

105
General Discussion / Tariq Aziz says West misjudged Saddam Hussein
« on: August 05, 2010, 08:41:01 PM »
Tariq Aziz says West misjudged Saddam Hussein

Former Iraqi deputy PM Tariq Aziz has staunchly defended Saddam Hussein in an interview with The Guardian newspaper.

Interviewed by the UK daily in his Iraq prison cell, Aziz said the West was wrong about the former Iraqi president.

"He is a man who history will show served his country," he said, adding that Iraq was now much worse off.

He also criticised US President Barack Obama for pushing forward with the US troop withdrawal, saying he was "leaving Iraq to the wolves".

For 30 years Saddam built Iraq and now it is destroyed. There are more sick than before, more hungry. The people don't have services. People are being killed every day in the tens, if not hundreds”

Aziz was the face of Saddam Hussein's regime on the world stage for many years.

In his first interview since he was captured shortly after the fall of Baghdad more than seven years ago, Aziz said that pulling out US combat troops before the country was stable would be lethal for Iraq.

"We are all victims of America and Britain," he was quoted as saying. "They killed our country in many ways. When you make a mistake you need to correct a mistake, not leave Iraq to its death."

He also said that Iraq was in a much worse state now than when Saddam Hussein was leading the country.

"For 30 years Saddam built Iraq and now it is destroyed. There are more sick than before, more hungry. The people don't have services. People are being killed every day in the tens, if not hundreds.

"I was encouraged when [Obama] was elected president, because I thought he was going to correct some of the mistakes of Bush. But Obama is a hypocrite. He is leaving Iraq to the wolves."

Aziz claimed that even during the time when Iraq was subject to UN-enforced sanctions and the oil-for-food programme, the country was stable and Iraqis were properly fed.

"Even during the time of sanctions, which is a difficult time in the life of any country, every day, every man, woman and child was taking 2,000 calories per day."
Churchill comparison

With his fluent English, trademark black-rimmed glasses and Cuban cigars, Aziz first came to world prominence while serving as foreign minister during the first Gulf War in 1991.

In his interview with The Guardian, Aziz claimed he tried to persuade Saddam Hussein not to invade Kuwait in 1991, because it would lead Iraq into a war with the US.

"I asked Saddam Hussein not to invade Kuwait," he said. "But I had to support the decision of the majority. When the decision was taken, I said to him this is going to lead to war with the US, and it is not in our interests to wage war against the US."

"But the decision was taken. I was the foreign minister of the country and I had to defend the country and do everything possible to explain our position. I stayed on the side of right."

Aziz also said he loved and respected his former leader and refused to condemn him for decisions he made.

"Didn't Churchill make mistakes? Didn't Brown make mistakes?" he asked.

However, in one cryptic remark he seemed to imply that his loyal view of Saddam Hussein's leadership was not the full picture.

"If I speak now about regrets, people will view me as an opportunist. I will not speak against Saddam until I am a free man. Wisdom is part of freedom. When I am free and can write the truth, I can even speak against my best friend," he said.

106
Trinbago, NBA & World Basketball / Am I reading right?
« on: August 04, 2010, 08:30:44 PM »
SHAQ to Celtics? :o

107
General Discussion / ‘Turbulent times’ ahead for blacks in T&T
« on: August 02, 2010, 12:53:47 AM »
‘Turbulent times’ ahead for blacks in T&T—Cudjoe
Cherisse Moe
Published: 2 Aug 2010

Professor Selwyn Cudjoe, president of the National Association for the Empowerment of African People (NAEAP), is predicting “turbulent times” for Africans in Trinidad and Tobago. Cudjoe said if current trends continued, the entire black population would degenerate into lower depths of poverty and despair. Cudjoe was speaking at the 10th Annual Emancipation Dinner and Awards Ceremony at Centre of Excellence, Macoya, last Saturday. This year’s theme was titled: “A Society in Transition: A Community at the Crossroads.” To help address the problem, Cudjoe appealed to the Government to call a meeting of the “relevant Africans groups” to put together a ten-year plan.

The plan, he said, would allow Africans “to act in ways that are conducive to their own self-interest and the well-being of the nation. “Unless we do this, the maddening killing will continue; the rising crime will continue; and those who can will continue to reproduce themselves without any serious consideration of what it means for the overall progress of the race and of the nation,” Cudjoe said. “Whether we like it or not, there will be turbulent times ahead for Africans in this country...We are in a crisis.” While calling on the Government to play a more proactive role in the advancement of black people in T&T, he said the former Patrick Manning-led administration should also shoulder some of the blame, as it failed to improve the quality of life of the local black community.

“We, in NAEAP, stand ready to assist the Government in any endeavour it wishes to undertake to transform the conditions of black people in this land,” Cudjoe said. “The predominantly black government did not see it fit to endorse the idea of making a sustained effort to deal with the problems that affect black children and black youth.” He said he was concerned that the African would become “irrelevant” in T&T, as many black men living in the “ghetto” did not expect to live until 30. He added that 40 per cent of the population is East Indians, whereas 37.5 per cent are Africans. “This divide is likely to grow as time goes on...We might see the same pattern that has emerged in Guyana, in which the dominant group will hold power in perpetuity,” Cudjoe said.

108
Jokes / Ali G
« on: July 22, 2010, 01:28:45 AM »
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P842Tmi6lrc&feature=related

Now this is Picong

D man on ah role.....

He lucky he missus take most d stick.... :devil:

109
Cricket Anyone / aust vs Pakistan
« on: July 21, 2010, 06:01:43 AM »
Aust 73/6  after 25 overs 2nd test

110
2010 World Cup - South Africa / Sven Goran Eriksson!!!
« on: June 26, 2010, 11:37:54 AM »
Eriksson must be d most overated and overpayed football manager.  He has reportedly been paid $3 million for the managing the Ivory Coast for the 3 matches.   

He must d wealthiest football manager after d huge payoffs he get with managing all these teams...
England, Man City, Nott County, Ivory Coast.

111
Cricket Anyone / Representation! What representation?
« on: June 20, 2010, 09:48:32 AM »
By Colin Croft
Guardian Published: 20 Jun 2010

Massive congratulations to Daren Ganga, who has been made an ambassador of Sport by the incoming government of T&T. This allows him to represent all 1.4 million of the people of the twin-island republic, anywhere in the world. However, here is a question. Having already represented the entire West Indies in 48 Tests, 2160 runs, average 25.71; and 35 ODI’s, 843 runs, average 25.54, is that not something of a demotion? Oh, you do not have to, as is usually the case, curse me. I was just being somewhat facetious. Any award from your country is worth celebrating and that is not a bad award at all. For all of his services to T&T, the guy deserves it. I wonder, though, if anyone realises that while Ganga now represents only about 20 percent of the population of the Caribbean, the entire West Indies cricket team, yes, that same one that is led so listlessly by Chris Gayle, represents all seven and a half million of us?

Must I believe that we like what we see? How they play? Why is it that no-one seems to complain or care? Do not tell me that the focus is on football now. This failure has been going on endlessly. We cannot “like it so!” There must be some changes! Gayle continues to suggest that “we have to do better the next game,” or “the batsmen let us down,” or “the bowlers let us down” etc. These have been Gayle’s diatribes for eight losing efforts in this South African series. Something; I think everything; is seriously wrong with this picture. These people are supposed to represent the nearly eight millions who still live in the Caribbean and several more millions in the diaspora overseas. I really do not know how anyone can take much more of this. As some people suggested, loudly, during the recent ICC W-T 20 in Barbados, when the West Indies lost so badly to Sri Lanka; “They should be put up against a wall and shot. They are useless!”

logoMaybe, we can do what was done by Al Capone, the gangster, in Chicago, USA, circa 1930’s, during the Prohibition Era. Now, those boys were very serious people! The Saint Valentine’s Day massacre, Bugsy Moran’s North Side gang’s destruction by Capone’s South Side gang, was the solution to problems then. When they had a problem with anyone giving them strife, for whatever reason, they simply rubbed them out. So, anyway, perhaps we could even review that First Test. Had I been the sole selector, it definitely would have been the last for a few players. How could anyone, the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB), the “Three Blind Mice”—selectors Clyde Butts, Robert Haynes and Raphick Jumadeen—justify that all, repeat, all, of the players who played so poorly in that First Test, can be retained for Test number two?

What did they see, that others who did pay attention, did not see? How could the politicians, technocrats, sports personalities and all normal people just accept this? For those who did not attend the match at the Queen’s Park Oval in St Clair, for whatever reason, be aware that their not attending matches, does not stop these “nincompoops” from being our cricketing ambassadors. They still represent us, even if we do not see them play. We cannot continue to hide behind stupid shadows. Am I to believe that the entire Caribbean is so blase, that the West Indies cricket team’s embarrassment does not matter anymore? Something drastic has to be done to change this humiliation! If Travis Dowlin is an opening batsman, indeed any batsman at Test level, then we could all also believe that the DPRK – Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) will win the Fifa 2010 World Cup.

Dowling is a dead duck, a wicket waiting to happen. Despite two half centuries against Australia last year, and a near hundred against Bangladesh, he has shown no understanding of batsmanship. His feet are always together when he plays any shot, and it really is only a matter of time before he is dismissed, ‘edging’. Dowlin does not need a batting coach. He needs an airplane to take him back home! Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel must be salivating, competing even, whenever they see Dowlin coming to the crease, fighting for this so very easy wicket. It is like bowling at a tail-ender. Narsingh Deonarine also is not far off that assessment either. One really wonders what players like Lendl Simmons have done not to be selected. Even if he has to open the innings, Darren Bravo must be a far better bet!

Ravi Rampaul, as fat as a fowl; check out his belly; is not a Test bowler at all. Do not even insult the word “fast”. To date, Rampaul has played four Tests, and has taken four wickets, yes, four wickets, each at a phenomenal 91.75 runs per wicket. If you are Christian, Muslim or Hindu, or neither, all that we all can do now is pray, much, please! It would not be a great achievement, for me or for anyone else. I am sure that I could make a come-back. At age 57, fairly fit, I am sure that I can bowl better than Rampaul now, not when I bowled 30-35 years ago. At the very least, I would be able to keep two consecutive deliveries on one side of the pitch. These players are so poor, it is past embarrassing. Has it really occurred to anyone anywhere that they represent us?

As I warned weeks ago, in an open note to Otis Gibson, Denesh Ramdin’s batting had disappeared, and his wicket-keeping was deteriorating similarly, quickly. After the display in Test number one, both of his skills are now absent. Anyone selected to keep wicket would look better, I am quite sure. Why are we continuing with him anyway? Both Gayle, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul, as batsmen, tried. Unfortunately, both have too much pressure on their batting skills to carry this team. Brian Lara and Viv Richards would struggle to carry this team, if they were now included. It is very hard to take. Also, somehow, Brendon Nash seemed demented. Since when is he Matthew Hayden? Sulieman Benn and Shane Shillingford, in his First Test, bowled equally well.

The last West Indies pairing of left-arm orthodox spin and right arm off-spin, together, would have been Albert Padmore and Jumadeen against India; 1976. India made that astronomical 402 to win then.
Lance Gibbs and Garfield Sobers; early 70’s; are more of note, and of course, there were the legendary Sonny Ramadin and Alf Valentine in 1950’s; against England. Ram and Val were so good, calypsoes were made for them! So, what do we do about these present West Indies players? Someone even mentioned that we should “not give up on our boys.” Unfortunately, the boys have given up on us, or more particularly, they are past being able to represent us. They are that poor! I would not suggest the “rub out” extreme, but something has to be done. We deserve better representation. We hope that they do not lose every match in this series!

112
Cricket Anyone / SHOCK
« on: June 16, 2010, 08:55:49 AM »
West Indies unchanged for second Test

Cricinfo staff

June 16, 2010

West Indies have named an unchanged squad for the second Test against South Africa at St Kitts, despite losing the opening game in Trinidad heavily by 163 runs. Fast bowler Kemar Roach has been retained, implying that he has recovered fully from the ankle injury which ruled him out of the five-match ODI series before the first Test.

The frontline seamers in Trinidad, Ravi Rampaul and debutant Nelon Pascal, went wicketless in both innings. Dwayne Bravo took one wicket while the remaining 13 wickets which fell were accounted for by the spinners. Roach's raw pace and ability to bowl yorkers with the new ball will come in handy for West Indies, should they play him at Warner Park.

However, the batting has been the biggest worry. West Indies crumbled to 102 in their first innings in Trinidad and, chasing 457 in their second, managed just 293 with only the captain Chris Gayle passing fifty.

Squad: Chris Gayle (Capt), Dwayne Bravo (vice-captain), Travis Dowlin, Brendan Nash, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Narsingh Deonarine, Darren Bravo, Denesh Ramdin, Darren Sammy, Sulieman Benn, Shane Shillingford, Ravi Rampaul, Nelon Pascal, Kemar Roach

The Headline says it all.....these selectors are beyond Pottong selectors...I can understand if d team lost by 30 runs but 163 runs and yuh keeping d same team.......

113
Cricket Anyone / Pollard in a predicament
« on: June 13, 2010, 08:30:56 PM »
Pollard in a predicament
Tony Cozier
Sunday, June 13th 2010

Kieron Pollard’s first match in the English Twenty20 championship, for Somerset against Middlesex at Lord’s, the game’s pre-eminent ground, produced an awesome display of power-hitting that, virtually single-handedly, transformed a perilous position into victory.

If it didn’t supplant Messi, Rooney, Ronaldo and Kaka on the sports page, it certainly merited attention amidst the welter of World Cup coverage.

His 89 off 45 balls, with seven sixes and seven fours, following three wickets in the Middlesex innings, carried Somerset from a tottering 31 for four after six overs to a winning 158 for five with 2.1 overs in hand.

One hit came within a few feet of clearing the famous pavilion, a feat only one other batsman had ever achieved.

Impressive as the straight statistics were, they required the embellishment provided by Brian Rose, Somerset’s former captain, now director of cricket.

’I watched Viv Richards and Ian Botham produce some very big hitting for Somerset, but for sheer power I have never seen anything like Kieron’s knock,’ he said.

More powerful than the Master Blaster and Beefy? It was a remarkable, almost sacreligious, statement. But others had made a similar assessment.

The Mumbai Indians of the Indian Premier League (IPL) paid more than US$1 million for such power. The South Australian Redbacks and the Somerset Sabres soon followed suit.

So why is Pollard not among the 33 players retained under contract by the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB)? Where was he yesterday when wickets were tumbling like nine pins at the Oval or at Leicester over the past couple of days where West Indies ’A’ were similarly collapsing against India ’A’?

The short and obvious answer is that his reputation has been made exclusively in the newest version of the game, restricted to 20 overs an innings to which Pollard’s clout is perfectly suited.

Defence, so essential in the traditional, long format, is almost an encumbrance. Any dot ball is a travesty.

What is more, while his performances for Mumbai, South Australia and Somerset-and, before them, Stanford SuperStars- draw superlatives, they are distinctly ordinary for the West Indies.

His highest score in 30 ODIs is 62, his average 19.92, in Twenty20 Internationals 38 at an average of 12.56. His medium-pace bowling adds to his value but is hardly front-line.

Yet all this does not necessarily mean that Pollard is strictly a limited-overs cricketer, just that he has had no opportunity in the past year and a half to show that he can be effective at first-class level.

Standards have undeniably fallen in the West Indies’ four-day competition over the years but his first-class average of 37.46 puts him on a par with several contemporaries selected in the Test team.

His last innings was in the 2009 regional season. It was 174 against Barbados. It was his third hundred in 20 first-class matches. Since then, he has been confined to late order ball-beating in the restrictions of ODIs and Twenty20s.

Still only 23 years old, he has said, as have most other young players, that he regards Test cricket as the true examination of a cricketer’s worth. He wants the chance to prove that he is up to it.

That places him in a dilemma.

As a professional, his financial worth is measured by the type of innings that electrified Lord’s on Wednesday and those in India when he was so dominant in Trinidad and Tobago’s march to the final of the Champions League last year.

Now he needs to decide how he can combine the two.

When chosen for the West Indies in the ODI series against Zimbabwe earlier this year, he initially sought release so he could fulfil his IPL contract from the start. The IPL regulation that the requirements of players’ national teams supercede contracts with their franchises kept him at home.

Picked for the current ’A’ team’s tour of England and Ireland, he informed the WICB that he was unavailable as he was fulfilling his pre-existing Somerset contract, reportedly worth £30,000.

For its part, the WICB stated its disappointment but, since it does not have Pollard under contract, it could not dictate to him where he can and cannot play.

But it is also the WICB’s responsibility to see to it that its selectors have the best players from whom to choose.

Pollard comes into that category and not purely as a short-game belter. He has proven at first-class level he is capable of long innings, his bowling has markedly improved and he is a dazzling fielder.

Above all, he is one of the most exciting cricketers in the modern game, the kind that West Indies cricket needs in this time of despair.

The WICB should see to that it finds out from him how he sees his future.

If he is serious about his desire to commit to the West Indies, he will have to forego conflicting contracts.

He can’t have it both ways.

It’s a predicament that he has in common with most emerging cricketers-and, come to that, the various boards-in the new age of burgeoning private Twenty20 leagues.

But it would be a pity if he never gets the opportunity to show his potential in the one form of the game that he says he is keenest to conquer.

Keep it up Keiron..... :applause:

115
General Discussion / Red Bull vs Gatorade!
« on: June 07, 2010, 05:49:26 AM »
Which do you prefer as an energy drink? 

116
Cricket Anyone / Pollard BIG UP
« on: June 06, 2010, 10:41:15 PM »
Way tuh goe partna...f--- d WICBC......

Dey know yuh already signed for  Somerset during d IPL...then dey pretending tuh put yuh name on d WI A team

Boy I happy yuh doe have to depend on these idiots like former cricketers who were dictated by d boards...plus they aint even give yuh a retainer contract.....

Yet people chastising yuh ...play yuh cricket wherever d opportunity exist.... ;D

117
2010 World Cup - South Africa / World Cup Pick
« on: June 05, 2010, 07:41:00 AM »
All right fellas..time tuh take d plunge...

Pick only 1 team.......NOT 2....for some hard head people...


Argentina.tuh win d World Cup....

118
General Discussion / 'We will be able to live to 1,000'
« on: May 23, 2010, 05:05:30 AM »
'We will be able to live to 1,000'
By Dr Aubrey de Grey
University of Cambridge

Life expectancy is increasing in the developed world. But Cambridge University geneticist Aubrey de Grey believes it will soon extend dramatically to 1,000. Here, he explains why.

Ageing is a physical phenomenon happening to our bodies, so at some point in the future, as medicine becomes more and more powerful, we will inevitably be able to address ageing just as effectively as we address many diseases today.

I claim that we are close to that point because of the SENS (Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence) project to prevent and cure ageing.

It is not just an idea: it's a very detailed plan to repair all the types of molecular and cellular damage that happen to us over time.

And each method to do this is either already working in a preliminary form (in clinical trials) or is based on technologies that already exist and just need to be combined.

This means that all parts of the project should be fully working in mice within just 10 years and we might take only another 10 years to get them all working in humans.

When we get these therapies, we will no longer all get frail and decrepit and dependent as we get older, and eventually succumb to the innumerable ghastly progressive diseases of old age.

We will still die, of course - from crossing the road carelessly, being bitten by snakes, catching a new flu variant etcetera - but not in the drawn-out way in which most of us die at present.

   
I think the first person to live to 1,000 might be 60 already

So, will this happen in time for some people alive today? Probably. Since these therapies repair accumulated damage, they are applicable to people in middle age or older who have a fair amount of that damage.

I think the first person to live to 1,000 might be 60 already.

It is very complicated, because ageing is. There are seven major types of molecular and cellular damage that eventually become bad for us - including cells being lost without replacement and mutations in our chromosomes.

Each of these things is potentially fixable by technology that either already exists or is in active development.

'Youthful not frail'

The length of life will be much more variable than now, when most people die at a narrow range of ages (65 to 90 or so), because people won't be getting frailer as time passes.

   
There is no difference between saving lives and extending lives, because in both cases we are giving people the chance of more life
The average age will be in the region of a few thousand years. These numbers are guesses, of course, but they're guided by the rate at which the young die these days.

If you are a reasonably risk-aware teenager today in an affluent, non-violent neighbourhood, you have a risk of dying in the next year of well under one in 1,000, which means that if you stayed that way forever you would have a 50/50 chance of living to over 1,000.

And remember, none of that time would be lived in frailty and debility and dependence - you would be youthful, both physically and mentally, right up to the day you mis-time the speed of that oncoming lorry.

Should we cure ageing?

Curing ageing will change society in innumerable ways. Some people are so scared of this that they think we should accept ageing as it is.

I think that is diabolical - it says we should deny people the right to life.

The right to choose to live or to die is the most fundamental right there is; conversely, the duty to give others that opportunity to the best of our ability is the most fundamental duty there is.

There is no difference between saving lives and extending lives, because in both cases we are giving people the chance of more life. To say that we shouldn't cure ageing is ageism, saying that old people are unworthy of medical care.

Playing God?

People also say we will get terribly bored but I say we will have the resources to improve everyone's ability to get the most out of life.

People with a good education and the time to use it never get bored today and can't imagine ever running out of new things they'd like to do.

And finally some people are worried that it would mean playing God and going against nature. But it's unnatural for us to accept the world as we find it.

Ever since we invented fire and the wheel, we've been demonstrating both our ability and our inherent desire to fix things that we don't like about ourselves and our environment.

We would be going against that most fundamental aspect of what it is to be human if we decided that something so horrible as everyone getting frail and decrepit and dependent was something we should live with forever.

If changing our world is playing God, it is just one more way in which God made us in His image.

Aubrey de Grey leads the SENS project at Cambridge University and also runs the Methuselah Mouse prize for extending age in mice.

119
Cricket Anyone / Lendl Simmons
« on: May 22, 2010, 07:07:48 PM »
What really going on?  It look like alot of Badmind at d WICBC...

D rate dey going at....Simmons might have to start playing for Scotland...

Dey waiting for d boy to loose he form then select him.....

We aint going nowhere until d entire WICBC is wiped out....

FRUSTRATED

120
Football / Onyewu to play one season at AC Milan for free
« on: May 17, 2010, 09:23:36 AM »
Onyewu to play one season at AC Milan for free         

May 17, 2010

Defender Oguchi Onyewu has pledged to play his final year at AC Milan without a salary after signing a 12-month contract extension.

Onyewu missed most of the 2009-10 season due to a serious knee injury, making just one appearance before rupturing the patellar tendon in his left knee during a World Cup qualifier when playing for the United States against Costa Rica.

His contract had two years left to run, but fit-again Onyewu requested a further year and told the club he would play for free. The club accepted his offer, which means the 28-year-old is now tied to Milan until the end of June 2013.

A club statement read: "Onyewu, who has been out for virtually the whole season due to injury, but who at this time is getting ready to face the World Cup adventure in South Africa with his national team, has become a star today with a significant gesture from a personal and professional standpoint.

"Onyewu has requested and obtained a contract extension from June 30, 2012 until June 30, 2013. With respect to that year, as was his wish, which has been appreciated by the club, Onyewu has asked not to receive any type of wages. This is an exemplary gesture that deserves our sincere congratulations.''

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