Stanford 2020 for $20 Million

Who would be your choice for Stanford Superstars captain?

  • Dwayne Bravo

    Votes: 6 21.4%
  • Chris Gayle

    Votes: 15 53.6%
  • Sylvester Joseph

    Votes: 1 3.6%
  • Ramnaresh Sarwan

    Votes: 6 21.4%

  • Total voters
    28
Bravo for sure, He was really good in the IPL. Played his best cricket of the year in my opinion.

I think that he is the most suited for this style of Game and he is aggressive which should be a good thing in 20/20.
 
Bravo for sure, He was really good in the IPL. Played his best cricket of the year in my opinion.

I think that he is the most suited for this style of Game and he is aggressive which should be a good thing in 20/20.

I have my reservations on Bravo being made captain, but then again who knows. He did play some good cricket in the IPL, I guess it was because he was surrounded by big name stars, because no sooner did he reach the Caribbean the vibes and everything disappeared from him, I honestly thought he did not carry the same spirit in the home series against Australia, he was poor in both forms of the game with bat and ball. Then again that can be said for all the batsmen except Chanderpaul and Sarwan.
You guys might ask what does that have to do with he being captain: Well I believe that he need to spend more time focusing on his role as a batting all rounder, first and less time on other facets of his cricket, and being captain might just add to his mental strain. 20/20 is the kind of cricket that always has a captain on his toes, with little time too second guess himself and decision because of the overs involve, I just believe that Bravo would be a better player than a captain.
 
Holding calls Stanford Super Series a 'farce'

Cricinfo staff

August 31, 2008


Michael Holding: "He [Stanford] is telling people in the Caribbean that he wants to revive West Indian cricket but how is a week of Twenty20 cricket in Antigua going to do that?" © AFP


The millions offered by Antigua-based billionaire Allen Stanford may have won over the West Indies and England boards, but Michael Holding, the former West Indies fast bowler, has taken a contrarian stand, saying Twenty20 games won't help revive cricket in the Caribbean. It marks a sharp turnaround from his statements in May, when he enthusiastically backed Stanford's plans. "I'm not interested in being involved with Mr Stanford because I do not think Mr Stanford is telling the people what he's really about," Holding told the Daily Mail.

The England team, as well as domestic Twenty20 champions Middlesex, will be involved in the week-long Stanford Super Series from October 25 to November 1. Stanford has on board a host of West Indian greats, including Garry Sobers and Viv Richards, but Holding said he won't be present for the series. "I am not going to be involved in a farce," he said. "He is telling people in the Caribbean that he wants to revive West Indian cricket but how is a week of Twenty20 cricket in Antigua going to do that?"

In May, Holding had joined the board of the Stanford 20/20, the domestic Twenty20 tournament in the region, calling Stanford's programme "amazing and comprehensive" and one that "encompasses funding for territorial development".

In this latest interview, he clarified his change of heart. "If what he started to do initially had been carried on, it would have benefited West Indies cricket because he was involved in the development of the game in various islands and donated money to them to improve their infrastructure," he said. "That is when I was involved but now [that] Stanford has got into bed with the ECB he doesn't need to do that anymore so he has abandoned it. He wants to promote himself and his companies, that's all. If people can't see that then I can't help them, it's their problem."

Holding said he doesn't like the Twenty20 format. "I don't think it is good for the game. Okay, it's entertainment, but cricket is what made me what I am. Cricket gave me the lifestyle I have and cricket sent my children to school so I am interested in what is best for it, not just the entertainment value.

"It has its place but it will be bad unless those in charge manage it properly and I do not think they can because they are blinded by money," he said. "I can see Test cricket dying because of this. I am not saying how many years that will take but if I was a young cricketer now I would want to play Twenty20 because of all the money. Why would I want to play Test cricket? And that is very unhealthy."

Stanford himself has maintained that Twenty20, and not Test cricket, will attract youngsters and bring in revenue for players. However, while stating he would try to recover his investment in the Stanford 20/20 from the television rights, he maintained profits would go to the West Indies Cricket Board. In June, Stanford, who had stopped his funding to regional boards over their lack of accountability, resumed giving $15,000 to each board every month.

Earlier in the year, Holding had quit the ICC's cricket committee after its decision to change the result of the 2006 Oval Test between England and Pakistan from a Pakistan forfeit to a draw. "I will never get involved with any cricket committee or cricket board again for the rest of my life," he said. "Never. I've had enough and I needed to move on. In my opinion, Pakistan and Inzamam-ul-Haq did the wrong thing in that match and I do not see why that result should have been changed for political expediency."

© Cricinfo
 
Tell Holding to put a gag in his damn mouth. He is no damn different, does he have West Indies Cricket at heart??
To be completely honest, I'm gonna have to agree with you there.

I think younger fast bowlers coming up in the Windies would benefit greatly from getting training from people of the class of Holding. I guess his wish to have a successful career in commentary has put the West Indies behind him...
 
I was watching a discussion on sky sports about what the england squad should be for this series and this is what they came up with;

Ravi Bopara
Matt Prior
Kevin Pietersen
Owais Shah
Andrew Flintoff
Paul Collingwood
Luke Wright
Samit Patel
Stuart Broad
Ryan Sidebottom
James Anderson
Graham Napier
Dimi Mascarenhas

It's an intresting one this!...I quite like the look of that squad..obviously it's going to be a really hard decision for the selectors? Do they stick with the centrally contracted players or do they take out a rather specialist team?
 
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I was watching a discussion on sky sports about what the england squad should be for this series and this is what they came up with;

Ravi Bopara
Matt Prior
Kevin Pietersen
Owais Shah
Andrew Flintoff
Paul Collingwood
Luke Wright
Samit Patel
Stuart Broad
Ryan Sidebottom
James Anderson
Graham Napier
Dimi Mascarenhas

It's an intresting one this!...I quite like the look of that squad..obviously it's going to be a really hard decision for the selectors? Do they stick with the centrally contracted players or do they take out a rather specialist team?

I agree with everyone in that team apart from Napier. I don't think the team should be judged on this seasons performance, they have to look at the last couple of seasons, there are players like Mal Loye, Joe Denley and Stuart Law (Who can play for England) that have always played well in Twenty20's and deserve a chance over a man who has done it in 2 games.
 
I was watching a discussion on sky sports about what the england squad should be for this series and this is what they came up with;

Ravi Bopara
Matt Prior
Kevin Pietersen
Owais Shah
Andrew Flintoff
Paul Collingwood
Luke Wright
Samit Patel
Stuart Broad
Ryan Sidebottom
James Anderson
Graham Napier
Dimi Mascarenhas

It's an intresting one this!...I quite like the look of that squad..obviously it's going to be a really hard decision for the selectors? Do they stick with the centrally contracted players or do they take out a rather specialist team?

Anderson has an awful T20 record. Goes at 8.4 an over.
 
Digicel proposes compromise to contract row

Cricinfo staff

September 12, 2008


Digicel has upped the ante in the dispute with the WICB © Digicel

The row between the West Indies Cricket Board and its sponsors, Digicel, took another twist on Thursday with a proposal from the company to settle its dispute with the board.

In August, Digicel filed an injunction in the High Court in London seeking to have the WICB withdraw all approval for the Stanford Super Series which, it claimed, encroached its "exclusive sponsorship rights". The move came in the light of rumours that Stanford was close to signing Cable and Wireless (Digicel's competitor and a former sponsor of the West Indies team) as a sponsor for the series.

The court put the matter to arbitration, and the results of this are due in October. However, in a statement sent to Cricinfo, Digicel said it proposed a "compromise solution will involve the waiver of a considerable number of legal and commercial rights owned by Digicel by virtue of its sole and exclusive sponsorship agreement with the WICB".

The conditions of the offer are that the Stanford side in the 20/20 for 20 match against England on November 1 wear official West Indies kit with Digicel branding; that no telecommunications company be involved in the event; and that Digicel's costs be paid for by the board.

While this might appear one-sided, Digicel claims that in return it will be "foregoing a large number of valuable legal rights and entitlements including broadcast rights, exclusively branded pitch mats, sight screens, perimeter boards, promotional opportunities, advertising, content rights and various other avenues for commercial use that it currently owns by virtue of its sole and exclusive sponsorship agreement with the WICB".

The statement concludes: "Digicel would call upon both the WICB and Stanford to engage constructively on this matter and to put cricket in the West Indies first. Digicel's compromise solution is a very credible alternative and provides something for every party concerned."

Insiders believe that the WICB might have little option but to agree to the bulk of the demands, because without the board's backing, the series could be deemed unofficial which, given the precedent set with the ICL in India, would create numerous issues for the players involved.

As far as the ECB are concerned, however, the matches were approved by the ICC back in June, and so they have no doubts about their status. An ECB spokesman told Cricinfo that the other details were solely an issue for the WICB.

A source at Digicel said that it had notified both the WICB and Stanford organisers about the proposal and was waiting for a response.

© Cricinfo
 
Stanford rejects Digicel contract offer

Cricinfo staff

September 20, 2008

The row between the West Indies Cricket Board and its major sponsors, Digicel, rumbles on after demands made by Digicel in relation to the forthcoming Stanford 20/20 for 20 were rejected by the Stanford organisers.

The board has been at loggerheads with Digicel regarding branding for the Stanford tournament for some time, culminating in Digicel taking out injunctions at London's High Court.

Digicel proposed a three-point compromise to the WICB earlier this month, and on Thursday Stanford officials sent back a counter-offer stating that they would not do any deals with Digicel's competitors, would pay all Digicel's costs, and would give the company some branding rights at the 2008 event.

However, the latter point was rejected out of hand, with Digicel maintaining that it wanted the same branding on Stanford Superstars shirts as it has on the full West Indies shirts for the next five years.

The main disagreement comes over the status of the tournament. Digicel maintains it is an official WICB event with a representative national team, and as such, under the terms of its contract with the WICB, that would give it full branding rights. Stanford insists that it is an unofficial team and, as such, is outside any existing WICB-Digicel agreement.

"The Superstars team is selected solely by Stanford 20/20 and Stanford 20/20 is not willing to gift to Digicel valuable rights to which it is simply not entitled and which Stanford 20/20 intends to sell as part of a presenting sponsor package for the Stanford Super Series," a Stanford spokesman said, accusing the telecommunications giant of continuing "to insist on receiving commercial rights to the Stanford Super Series which are way in excess of its contractual entitlements".
 
source: http://content-wi.cricinfo.com/england/content/current/story/369109.html
England TEAM
Kevin Pietersen (capt),
James Anderson,
Ian Bell,
Ravi Bopara,
Stuart Broad,
Paul Collingwood,
Alastair Cook,
Andrew Flintoff,
Stephen Harmison,
Samit Patel,
Matt Prior (wk),
Owais Shah,
Graeme Swann,
Ryan Sidebottom,
Luke Wright

Sidebottom, Anderson, and especially Alastair Cook don't seem T20 material to me.

I'm going to have to put my money on the West Indies, but I'm sure it'll be an interesting series no doubt.
 
Anyone know if there is Audio Commentary streaming for the first game today? Perhaps a West Indian station.....

BBC are covering all the other games via 5live or BBC London but nothing for Stanford Superstars v Trinidad & Tobago.
 

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