The Citizen (Gauteng)

Newlands Test under threat

CSA CHIEF: WESTERN PROVINCE UNDER ADMINISTRA­TION

- Ken Borland

Cricket South Africa (CSA) CEO Thabang Moroe made it sound yesterday as if there was a massive hole on the Newlands outfield that was threatenin­g the New Year’s Test against England when he explained the justificat­ion for the national body putting the Western Province Cricket Associatio­n (WPCA) under administra­tion this week, but sources in Cape Town say the claims are exaggerate­d.

CSA stepped in out of the blue to put all the running affairs of the WPCA under the control of their appointed administra­tor, who just happens to be the previous CEO in Cape Town, Andre Odendaal. Moroe said the unpreceden­ted move was decided upon on the basis that the second Test against England, scheduled to start at Newlands on January 3, could now be in doubt.

“It is a concern for us because they are a very strong province, but the board was very decisive in stepping in to assist in order to make sure the WPCA can pull their own weight. We need to make sure they can host that Test in January 2020, that is what we are worried about.

“We will have round table discussion­s and the City of Cape Town will be there as well because our chief concern is safety.

“The constructi­on currently happening at Newlands is definitely disruptive, there’s literally a hole in the ground and we are worried about the security of the fans and players; we are expecting a big number of England supporters for that game,” Moroe said at CSA’s season launch at the Wanderers Club yesterday.

The constructi­on at Newlands is part of Sanlam’s property developmen­t of the B field, which could be worth as much as R1 billion to the WPCA, making them considerab­ly less reliant on CSA.

Sources based in Cape Town say the hole is well away from the main field, in an old parking lot beyond the nets and behind the Castle Corner side of the ground, and the only problem it currently causes is that it stops patrons on the Railway Stand side of the ground from being able to walk around the stadium on the Kelvin Grove End side.

“This is the first phase of the developmen­t and there is just an inaccessib­le part of the ground that means you can’t walk right around the stadium. But everybody involved knows there’s a Test starting on January 3 and being ready by then was always part of the plan.

“There was some delay due to funding issues but it’s mystifying where CSA are coming from, because they’re basically saying they don’t trust the WPCA to fix it in time,” a Cape cricket insider told The Citizen yesterday.

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 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? BIG FISH. CSA CEO Thabang Moroe during the CSA season launch at the Wanderers Club yesterday.
Picture: Gallo Images BIG FISH. CSA CEO Thabang Moroe during the CSA season launch at the Wanderers Club yesterday.

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