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Author Topic: What is the requirement to be able to play for Combined Campuses & Colleges?  (Read 1522 times)

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Offline Conquering Lion

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What is the requirement to be able to play for Combined Campuses & Colleges?
I know Cave Hill is in BDOS, but how come year in year out CCC is loaded with Bajans like a Barbados development XI?

Kantasingh in CCC squad
Published: 2 Jan 2010

T&T’s left-arm spinner Kavesh Kantasingh has been named in a 13-man Combined Campuses and Colleges (CCC) named for the West Indies First Class season first-round match. CCC to be led by experienced batsman Floyd Reifer will meet in Jamaica from January 8-11. Player/coach Reifer has been named captain and his former Barbados teammate and West Indies pacer Corey Collymore has joined the staff as assistant coach and fast bowling consultant for the team which includes eight Barbadians.

Reifer takes over as captain from the Jamaican Simon Jackson, who led the side last season. Collymore, 32, played most recently for Sussex in the English County Championship. He was a late addition recently to the Barbados trials but has now opted to join the CCC management staff. The Barbadians in the squad include batsman Omar Phillips and off-spinner Ryan Hinds, who both played for West Indies against Bangladesh in July.

Jamaicans Jackson and wicket-keeper/batsman Chadwick Walton, batsman Romel Currency of St Vincent and the Grenadines, Kantasingh and Guyanese pacer Gilford Moore are the only non-Barbadians in the unit. Young batsmen Kjorn Ottley (T&T), Nkrumah Bonner (Jamaica) and Raymon Reifer (Barbados) are not in the squad in spite of stroking hundreds in a CCC trial fixture that ended on Tuesday. With a record of four wins, four draws and four losses for 60 points, CCC finished joint fifth—with Barbados—in the 2009 WICB Regional 4-Day Championship standings behind runaway winners Jamaica (106), the Windward Islands (79), Leeward Islands (77) and T&T (70).
We fire de old set ah managers we had wukkin..and iz ah new group we went and we bring in. And if the goods we require de new managers not supplying, when election time come back round iz new ones we bringin. For iz one ting about my people I can guarantee..They will never ever vote party b4 country

Offline weary1969

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Dem is scabs in waitin
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

Offline Yardie08

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What is the requirement to be able to play for Combined Campuses & Colleges?
I know Cave Hill is in BDOS, but how come year in year out CCC is loaded with Bajans like a Barbados development XI?

They finished tied with BDOS, so they fully developed then.  ;D  You are not the only one asking about the selection policy for CCC.

[url]http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sports/Sports-Desk-03-2010[\url]
That dubious CCC squad

From The Sports Desk

BY HARTLEY ANDERSON Observer writer

Sunday, January 03, 2010

IT was with bemusement and surprise that I perused last week's Combined Campuses and Colleges (CCC) squad that will compete in the shortened WICB regional four-day first-class championship this season.

The philosophy which presumably underpins the formation of the CCC team is the mobilisation of a core of players from the tertiary institutions across the region who possess the requisite aptitude and attitude for the game; who fall just below the first-team standard of their individual territories; who can provide options for the West Indies selectors in the future, and who will simultaneously function as a Development Squad.

Further, I assume that the CCC was conceptualised to ensure the sustainability of cricket within these institutions against the backdrop of other competing sports -- athletics, football and basketball -- which offer more attractive incentives, like scholarships.

For some reason, however, the criteria for selection to this team has been shrouded in secrecy, with cricket fans around the region having to be groping in the dark and second-guessing in order to unravel its real essence.

But back to this season's squad.

The first element of surprise came in the form of Floyd Reifer, a 37-year-old underachiever who has been elected to lead the team. This is a backward step and a clear insistence on maintaining the "old guard" at all cost.

A long-time campaigner at the regional level, Reifer is an average batsman and leader, as was accentuated by his inauspicious stint at the helm of the makeshift West Indies squad last year.

His questionable capacity in both areas, along with his untenable prospect of ever playing for the West Indies again, makes his continued inclusion to the CCC squad quite ill-advised.

Selections of this nature suggest a paucity of leadership among the college players, with last year's captain, Simon Jackson, although being a part of the squad, having to make way for Reifer.

This is a distinctive setback for Jackson, who captains Kingston Cricket Club domestically and as a leader is regarded by players, fans and administrators as a deep thinker of the game.

Again, the inclusion of eight virtually unrecognisable -- whether by name or exploit -- Barbadians in a squad of 14 is itself a mammoth puzzle since Barbados has struggled to find a decent squad over the past few years and is comfortably behind Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana in the regional pecking order.

In short, Barbados has been effectively allowed to field two teams in the tournament as the CCC has for too long been run as an unofficial Bajan "B" team -- which has generally failed to make an impression on the regional landscape since its genesis a few seasons ago.

Ironically, if any territory deserved to field a "B" team it wouldn't be Barbados, but rather Jamaica or T&T by virtue of recent results, strength and organisation of their cricketing programmes, especially at the youth level, the depth of players at their disposal, and their current impact and contribution to the Senior West Indies team.

Yet I refuse to believe that the makeup of the CCC squad is at all influenced by its Cave Hill headquarters and a few individuals who were behind the squad's emergence; that we as a region have surreptitiously returned to insularity, and that promising 20-year-olds like former West Indies Youth star Nkrumah Bonner, Zeniffe Fowler -- the most prolific batsman in last season's Super League -- and Shacoya Thomas cannot find a place on a regional college team.

Interestingly Bonner, who attends university here in Jamaica, travelled to Barbados at short notice, made 108 and snared three wickets in the CCC trial match last week, but evidently was never going to be selected even had he made a thousand runs.

Two other youngsters in Kjorn Ottley of Trinidad and Tobago and Raymond Reifer of Barbados also made centuries in that practice game, but at 20 and 19 years old, respectively, were likewise ignored.

Since its conception a few seasons ago, the composition of successive CCC teams has done little to dispel the accusations of discrimination and insularity, with this latest episode merely adding fuel to the fire.

If those who select and manage the team have lost their way, perhaps they should be reminded that these collegians are principally playing for recognition and individual pride since they are not representing a territory.

For the CCC to salvage some credibility while simultaneously boosting its performance, I propose a more transparent method of selection -- on merit -- with an emphasis on youth and potential, rather than on that nebulous and problematic criterion that they call "experience", which is merely the perpetuation of a sentimental and ineffectual "Old Boys Club".

The following is that dubious CCC squad:

Floyd Reifer (captain), Simon Jackson, Omar Phillips, Kyle Corbin, Nekoli Parris, Romel Currency, Chadwick Walton, Ryan Austin, Jason Bennett, Gilford Moore, Kevon McLean, Khismar Catlin, Kavesh Kantasingh.


Offline Conquering Lion

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And you can't tell me iz only fellahs from Barbados in tertiary education...... ;D

BTW, what courses Hinds and Reifer enrolled in?
We fire de old set ah managers we had wukkin..and iz ah new group we went and we bring in. And if the goods we require de new managers not supplying, when election time come back round iz new ones we bringin. For iz one ting about my people I can guarantee..They will never ever vote party b4 country

Offline Storeboy

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To answer your question, the criteria are:
1. Citizenship of Barbados
2.  Unable to make the WI first team
3.  Potential to be a scab
4. Student of the UWI
Never, never, ever give up! Go T&T Warriors!

Offline weary1969

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To answer your question, the criteria are:
1. Citizenship of Barbados
2.  Unable to make the WI first team
3.  Potential to be a scab
4. Student of the UWI

Good list
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

 

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