Emerging players T20 tourney among CWI development plans
ATwenty20 tournament for emerging players in the Caribbean may be on the cards for next year.
Director of Cricket Miles Bascombe said Cricket West Indies (CWI) and organisers of the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) are working collaboratively to identify the next generation of players to represent West Indies in the format on the international stage.
“There is some recognition that the CPL may not necessarily be where those stars would emerge, so we are working with CPL to have an emerging players’ regional T20 tournament,” Bascombe said during a CWI news conference on Monday in Bridgetown.
“We recognise, in terms of T20 cricket, that we need a way to find our next crop of T20 players. We have had success in T20 cricket, and I’m sure the head coach [Darren
Sammy] is anticipating some more success as we play at home in this (T20) World Cup. But we generally still have to work hard at finding our next crop of emerging T20 stars.”
The T20 tournament is part of a suite of development projects that CWI plans to undertake in the coming years to revitalise the game in the Caribbean.
Bascombe said the development of a sustained pathway to the international stage for men’s and women’s players was an important item on the high-performance agenda.
“Pathway development will be key to our cricket system,” he said. “On the men’s side, I think we are almost where we want to be. We have players coming into the system formally from the under-15 level and that picks up very talented players from 12, but generally from 13.
“We have structure for those players all the way through to under19s. And we have recognised that at the under-23 level, we still have leakages at that age group, and we are working to ensure that we have a programme that helps to capture those players.
“Over the next few months, and over the next few years, you will definitely see a lot of work going into men’s under-23 programme.”
On the women’s side, Bascombe said: “We only currently have senior women’s and under-19s; and if we really want to get to the top of world cricket in women’s cricket, we definitely have to capture younger talent and have them playing the game at an earlier age, giving them more awareness and skill development.”
In this regard, Bascombe said CWI has started working with coaches in the territories to bring alignment to the brand of play and performance indicators across formats.