South Africa: Transfer System
By Trevor Chesterfield
5 January 1999
CAPE TOWN - In a bold plan to normalise the game at provincial level
within three seasons in South Africa, the United Cricket Board is to
introduce a pool system in which ``players of colour'' are to play a
dominant role.
The scheme, brain child of former Free State president John Blair, a
committee is soon to be established to strictly monitor what is little
more than a transfer system, but one which the UCB hope, in industrial
buzz terminology ``fast track'' players through the system.
Richard Harrison, the UCB executive member responsible for handling
the pool player system portfolio, said the plan was more of a
voluntary draft system and would be handled by an arbitration
committee with players, once they had been committed to a host
province, be part of their playing compliment for the remainder of the
season. This would prevent players moving from a new province back to
their old union in the same season.
Part of the scheme is a restriction of 17 players, which excludes
those under UCB contract, and in a move to speed up the process, the
17 (or less) names of each provincial squad must be listed with the
UCB by June 1.
Players to be included in the pool system are those who have not been
contracted by the 11 provinces who are part of the SuperSport Series
or the Standard Bank League and Cup limited-overs tournaments. Those
``players of colour'' who have been included in the pool system must be
contracted by the end of July.
Outlining the benefits of the system, Harrison said the idea was
designed to give those provinces where there were no black players in
the provincial system a chance to contract promising players from the
pool. ``Hopefully we will see the players as well as the weaker
provinces benefit through this system,'' Harrison said.
Imtiaz Patel, the UCB's director of professional players affairs, said
the pool system had nothing to do with quotas or affirmative
action. The idea was to increase the number of back players at
provincial level as fast as possible.
Asked if the plan was to have more than 100 provincial black players
by 2005, he hoped ``we would be normalised to the extent to away with
the pool system.''
|