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A report has suggested that Roger Brathwaite, the CEO of the West Indies board, has offered his resignation
August 11, 2005
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Brathwaite has been a key figure in the ongoing row between the players and board which has left the region's cricket in crisis, and his opponents have been increasingly critical of his handling of the affair.
While he has been reluctant to speak to the media, on the occasions he has, his comments have sometimes, with hindsight, turned out to be misleading. The way the recruitment of A-team players to bolster the strike-hit squad in Sri Lanka was handled was widely lambasted. It also seems that Digicel are less than impressed with the way Brathwaite has dealt with them.
The pressure is mounting. On Tuesday, the Jamaica Gleaner wrote that Brathwaite "must bear corporate responsibility for the board's failure to produce the quality product that the consumers are demanding and are required to pay for. He has failed his employers by his inability to engineer an end to the damaging impasse. As such, we question his ability to effectively continue in his position."
With the senior board officials also attracting increasing flak for their negotiations of the board's new contract with Digicel in 2004, Brathwaite looks to have lost too much credibility with players and public to be able to survive.
Gordon, a respected businessman with a proven track record, faces a tough challenge in turning round a cash-strapped and unpopular organisation. That task will be made easier if he can dispense of an incrrasingly lame-duck chief executive sooner rather than later.
Executive editor Martin Williamson joined the Wisden website in its planning stages in 2001 after failing to make his millions in the internet boom when managing editor of Sportal. Before that he was in charge of Sky Sports Online and helped launch and run Sky News Online. With a preference for all things old (except his wife and children), he has recently confounded colleagues by displaying an uncharacteristic fondness for Twenty20 cricket. His enthusiasm for the game is sadly not matched by his ability, but he remains convinced that he might be a late developer and perseveres in the hope of an England call-up with his middle-order batting and non-spinning offbreaks. He is now managing editor of ESPN EMEA Digital Group as well as his Cricinfo responsibilities.
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