Stabroek News Sunday

Rowley optimistic over CPL but warns of challenges

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sources, we’ve cleared the pathway for that conversati­on and we would facilitate as we are able to, under the confines of the CMO’s guidance.

“So we would be happy to host it within the confines of what we do here but they’re some serious logistical arrangemen­ts because we will want to preserve our environmen­t and that tournament will involve a number of persons coming into Trinidad and Tobago.”

He added: “A tournament in Trinidad and Tobago involving the teams of CPL with players coming from all over the world or all over the region, that creates a more complex arrangemen­t because if they’re coming from areas where they’re problems and right now virtually everywhere in the world has problems.

“We have to be careful … but we want to look at it (staging CPL) positively and we will. But as of now, we don’t have formal requests to do that.”

The CPL is scheduled to be played from August 19 to September 26 across several Caribbean nations including Barbados, St Lucia, St Kitts, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad – which has hosted the final for the last three seasons.

However, the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic has put the tournament in danger, and organisers are desperatel­y trying to find solutions to ensure it can go ahead as planned, despite the ongoing public health crisis.

Trinidad was among the first Caribbean countries to close its borders to help stop the spread of COVID-19 and have managed to limit recorded infections to 116 along with eight deaths.

Rowley warned, however, that with mandatory quarantine measures still in place for anyone entering the island, the tournament could face complicati­ons depending on when it was scheduled.

“Now, if you’re coming into this country you have to go into quarantine. If the intention is to have the tournament during the time when coming in means going into quarantine, well then obviously we can’t do it,” Rowley pointed out.

“But if the tournament is scheduled for a time when that mandatory quarantine is not on the table, then we can do it.”

Security Minister Stuart Young added there were solutions to the challenge posed by quarantine.

“It is not insurmount­able. The CMO and myself have been working with some sectors … and once they satisfy us that outside of Trinidad and Tobago they’ve quarantine­d for the 14-day period and provide the test results … they’re ways. There’s flexibilit­y and we’re always being guided by our public health experts.”

Health Minister, Terrence Deyalsingh, said the proposed tour of England by West Indies in July would be used as a guide for authoritie­s here.

“We’ll be paying attention to the playing conditions being developed now,” he said.

“This tour by the West Indies to England will give us a template to look at to see how we can manage the on-field applicatio­n of cricket to CPL.”

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