logo
Caribbean looks to revive passion and pride for cricket – and for the region

Caribbean looks to revive passion and pride for cricket – and for the region

The Guardiana day ago
When they toured overseas in the 1970s, West Indies cricketers were sometimes subjected to barrages of racist abuse. But back home in the Caribbean, the men were heroes, with families huddled around radios and televisions whenever they played and shouts of jubilation erupting across entire communities whenever they won.
Today, the generation of players who won two World Cups, in 1975 and 1979, are acclaimed as living legends for stepping up to the crease regardless of the challenges – and triumphing over teams from larger, more developed nations.
And as the region celebrates Emancipation Month to commemorate the end of slavery, they have been hailed as figures of regional pride whose mastery of a game imported by the British became a powerful symbol of political and cultural resistance.
Earlier this month, St Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) hosted the first-ever Emancipation Cricket Festival, which the culture and tourism minister, Carlos James, described as a reminder of the powerful link 'between our emancipation, resistance, our Caribbean culture and the birth of Caribbean cricket'.
'Some folks ask, why are you linking cricket – which is a game of the English – to emancipation. How does it correlate? Well, it was a period where every Caribbean national was glued to their radios … their television sets, to follow these men who went out in the middle of the cricket pitch,' James said.
By touring – and winning – that generation of sportsmen sent a powerful message, he said: 'They were making a political statement that we are young Black men from small Caribbean islands – and we can dominate the world.'
James said that understanding the link between sport and politics – and reviving the collective passion for the game – could help turn the tide for today's West Indies team, which has performed poorly in recent games.
St Vincent and the Grenadines' prime minister, Ralph Gonsalves, one of the region's strongest voices for reparations from Europe for the genocide of Native peoples and the enslavement of African people, said the aim of the emancipation festival was to bring awareness to the region's period of struggle and resistance.
'Cricket, a game brought to us … by the British colonists, became our own existential instrument to aid our quest for national liberation, liberty, equality, fairness and justice,' he said.
'We absorbed this English sport, mastered it, transcended its limits, made it our own, redefined it - and took it beyond the boundaries.'
He added that today, 'cricketing culture' remained vital to the region.
But such is the state of Caribbean cricket that Caricom, the 15-country regional bloc, recently said that it was 'deeply concerned … about all aspects of the current state of the game in the region'.
In a statement, Caricom said: 'Cricket has, for decades, been a platform through which our small nations have collectively stood tall on the world stage. West Indies Cricket is very much a 'public good'.'
It added that 'the [West Indies] team's recent performance is a moment of reckoning for this cherished Caribbean institution'.
Describing cricket as a 'glue that has kept us together', Sir Clive Lloyd, who twice led the West Indies to world cup victory, welcomed the intervention by Caricom, saying: 'We are not a very rich area and [it will be good] if they can inject cash and whatever it is that is needed.'
Kesrick Williams, 35, a former cricketer from St Vincent, said some of today's players were becoming disillusioned and needed more support. He called for a change in the general culture of West Indies cricket to revive passion for the sport among children and young people. 'I can't tell when last I saw cricket being played in the road and the traffic had to stop. We have to build back that cricket culture and that firm love for the game,' he said.
'Growing up, what would put a smile on my dad's face was watching cricket. As a youngster when I saw that … I fell in love with cricket.'
James said Caricom was hoping to include the cricket heroes of the 70s – who were recently the subject of a set of a commemorative stamps in SVG – in discussions about the game:
'Most of the legends are still around. And if we can take an ounce of passion that they have, and we move that from their generation to the next generation of Caribbean cricketers, it will make a whole heap of difference.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alejandro Garnacho issued with new snub as Man Utd negotiate Chelsea transfer
Alejandro Garnacho issued with new snub as Man Utd negotiate Chelsea transfer

Daily Mirror

time24 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Alejandro Garnacho issued with new snub as Man Utd negotiate Chelsea transfer

Manchester United kicked off their Premier League season with a 1-0 defeat to Arsenal at Old Trafford on Sunday, a game where Alejandro Garnacho was unsurprisingly absent, with his United career all but over Wantaway Manchester United misfit Alejandro Garnacho will not play for Argentina in their upcoming World Cup qualifiers at the start of September. ‌ Garnacho is set to leave United before the transfer window closes, if the Red Devils and Chelsea can come to an agreement over a transfer fee. The Blues are pushing hard to take the young winger to Stamford Bridge, with United ready to cash in if the money is right. It's understood Garnacho has already agreed terms with Chelsea. ‌ The 21-year-old has been training on his own at Carrington for a month and has been frozen out of the squad completely by Ruben Amorim, with his comments and subsequent social media antics following the Europa League Final the last straw for the United head coach. Garnacho had initially fallen foul of Amorim when he was dropped for the Manchester derby last December, before being reintegrated back into the squad - unlike Marcus Rashford, who was loaned to Aston Villa in January. ‌ Unsurprisingly, Garnacho was not involved in United's Premier League opener against Arsenal at Old Trafford on Sunday. Now he has been left out of the Argentina squad for the World Cup qualifying fixtures with Venezuela and Ecuador next month. Garnacho, who made his international debut as a teenager in 2023, was a consistent selection by boss Lionel Scaloni in 2024, but has been left on the outside looking in during 2025. During United's pre-season tour of the United States, Amorim was asked whether it was a shame it hadn't worked out with Garnacho and himself. He said: "I think Garnacho you can understand and you can see, he's talented, he's a really talented boy. And sometimes things don't work out. "You cannot explain specifically what it is. But I have the feeling, I think it's clear that Garnacho wants a different thing with a different leadership. And I can understand that. "So I think it's not a problem. Sometimes you adapt to one guy, you have the connection. Other times, you want a new challenge. So, we try to make everything okay to all the parts. To the club, to the coach and to the players. So, it's a natural thing in football." There are five Premier League based players in the Argentina squad: Emi Martinez (Aston Villa), Cristian Romero ( Tottenham), Julio Soler ( Bournemouth), Alexis Mac Allister ( Liverpool) and Claudio Echeverri ( Manchester City).

Zoe Aldcroft: ‘This World Cup has the potential to change women's rugby for ever'
Zoe Aldcroft: ‘This World Cup has the potential to change women's rugby for ever'

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Zoe Aldcroft: ‘This World Cup has the potential to change women's rugby for ever'

'I was playing for Scarborough against Whitby,' says Zoe Aldcroft as the England women's rugby captain pauses before the start of the World Cup this week and describes one of her formative experiences in the game. 'I must have been 12 at the time as I was the only girl playing rugby and we were up at Whitby. It was the coldest day ever and the wind was whipping. There was such a steep slope at Whitby Rugby Club and they had this massive guy playing for them. Whenever he broke the line they always used to shout 'Cannonball.'' Aldcroft, the inspirational 28-year-old leader and lock forward, lets slip a gap-toothed grin as she remembers the scene. 'He'd broken the line and, as the full-back, I was the last one between him and the try line. I knew I had to stop him so I dropped my shoulder and just nailed him. I think it stunned a lot of people.' Did that crunching tackle mark a sea change in attitudes towards her as a girl playing boys' rugby? 'Definitely in respect of my teammates, which was something I really enjoyed,' she says. 'I could see they trusted me and knew I could be just as tough as them.' We soon move on to a far bloodier incident, which was even more of a test for the young rugby pioneer in North Yorkshire. 'There was a different time, in training, where I collided heads with one boy. He started crying and I was holding it in, telling myself desperately: 'Do not cry, do not cry …' Then I got up as quick as I could and was ready to go again. I had to show I was stronger, tougher and could take playing with the boys.' Aldcroft was always 'super-sporty' but, before rugby, she also did ballet. 'I was not as nimble as other ballet dancers' she says with a little laugh before explaining that she fell into rugby after her brother Jonathan switched sports from football. 'I was down there watching him on the sidelines with my parents and the coach was like: 'C'mon then. Get involved.' 'I thought 'Yes' and never looked back. The best thing is that, while I was the only girl that used to play there, Scarborough Rugby Club now have 50 girls playing under-13s, under-15 and a senior set-up for women's rugby. It's changed so much.' There is such optimism and warmth in Aldcroft's character that it is unsurprising she should regard the next six weeks as another definitive stage in a female sporting revolution: 'This World Cup has the potential to change women's rugby for ever. In England, over the last few years, we've been filling stadiums and this tournament will build momentum and so much excitement. If we do win the World Cup, it will change our lives and also all the young girls who are growing from grassroots levels into the professional side.' The England squad has a northern heartbeat and it seems fitting that their opening group match this Friday should be against USA in Sunderland. 'The other week we tried to pick a full XV of girls from the north,' Aldcroft says. 'We added a couple from the Midlands and just about made it. That's important because Sale are the only northern club in PWR [Premiership Women's Rugby].' Her husband, Luke Stratford, is the scrum coach for the women's team at Sale Sharks. Aldcroft smiles ruefully when reminded Luke has said before that she worries about keeping her place, despite being World Rugby's women player of the year in 2021 and after winning 65 caps. 'I have this impostor syndrome sometimes, but it makes me tick in a weird way. It makes me feel like I have to push myself again because you see so many times where life just changes quickly.' Aldcroft is an intriguing mix. She carries a searing focus on the field, leading by example, while away from rugby she is relaxed and chatty. Some of her friends in the squad have described her as 'the craziest girl' they know. 'It's probably because I'm super-dedicated and, playing rugby, I love the contact that maybe other people shy away from. I really go for it. But, off the pitch, I can be silly and fun and goofy.' Jonny Wilkinson is her inspiration and during his playing career those last three words she uses to describe herself would never have applied to the obsessive No 10 who helped England win the men's World Cup in 2003. 'Years later I read one of his books,' she says, 'and that instilled in me a little bit of his mentality. I related to it because I'm a perfectionist and obsessed with winning and being the best. I met him when I was on a tour and from then I was so interested in his way of thinking.' Aldcroft smiles when asked if she told Wilkinson that she carries a knitted doll of him at the bottom of her match bag. 'No, because I didn't have my doll back then. But I always think a little like he did because I'm obsessed with my performance.' I've heard that, as soon as she is alone after a game, Aldcroft will watch a recording of the match. 'I still do that and it's always the whole game. My husband's like: 'Switch off.' I say: 'Just let me watch this and then I can chill.' I can't relax until I've watched it and seen what I could have done better.' Does she ever feel proud when watching herself? 'Maybe more a feeling of relief. I'd say: 'I've been OK, I've done my job.' Maybe when I've finished rugby I'll look back and think: 'Oh. That was quite good.'' Her most painful match remains the 2022 World Cup final against New Zealand – when England started the game in Auckland on the back of an unbeaten run of 30 victories. Aldcroft felt certain they would become world champions: 'I wasn't even nervous because I had absolutely no doubt. In my eyes there was no way we were losing that final.' England were 14-0 up in 14 minutes but, soon afterwards, Lydia Thompson was sent off. Aldcroft was substituted after 29 minutes after a concussion and England ended up losing a gripping game 34-31. 'It was a big lesson because you see how quickly a game can change and you have to fight against the unfairness as well. We had a chance to score a try from that last lineout; 99% of the time we would have caught it and gone over, but it didn't happen.' Aldcroft stresses that 'the culture around the team had to change and, since Mitch [former All Black head coach John Mitchell] came in, we've become a completely different team. We've worked massively on our culture, on our bond as a team. We were tight [in 2022] but not to the level that we are now. It's something we've really tried to develop as, the tighter you are as a team, the harder you want to fight for each other on the pitch. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion 'We've done a lot of work in telling the stories of our lives. We want to have conversations that go into a deeper part of our teammates' life and know them down to their roots. Knowing what makes each other tick makes such a difference.' Some members of Aldcroft's squad have extraordinary personal stories – none more so than Meg Jones who, in March, spoke to me in moving detail about the death of her parents within the space of four shattering months. 'Meg is the strongest person I've known,' Aldcroft says. 'Before her mum and dad died, she stood up and spoke about how her mum was an alcoholic. Lots of people in the room hadn't known because she'd kept that to herself for so long. When her parents died, it was something she wanted to address with the group and she was completely open. We know when she needs a moment and we support her as best we can.' Jones is the vice-captain, alongside Marlie Packer, and there is also a wider leadership group. 'We all have different attributes and different relationships with different people in the team. It brings us together and allows people to elevate themselves and be empowered.' Our conversation moves in different tangents and Aldcoft is amused as she remembers her husband wearing shorts to their wedding. They recently celebrated their first anniversary and she describes how, when they first met outside a nightclub in Gloucester, she was 20. 'Luke was in fancy dress, dressed as a woman,' Aldcroft says drily, 'in a long skirt and a top bought from the charity shop.' Luke knew she was an England international and, having diligently pursued her, they eventually began to go out and were married last summer. Aldcroft wore an elegant white wedding dress, but her new husband cut a different figure in a sky blue jacket, white shirt, silver bow-tie and navy-blue shorts. 'He hates wearing trousers, even in minus conditions,' Aldcroft says. 'So that was his one condition – wearing shorts on the wedding day. I had to think what would look good with shorts and as soon as the wedding was done the tie was off and the flip-flops were on. It helps that I'm super-chilled as well.' It is almost as distinctive that England's World Cup captain is keen to become a podiatrist after her rugby career. 'This summer I did my foot-health course as a starter and I think I want to do a degree in it. It's a lot about joint alignment, your gait, and also chopping away scaly skin and sorting out in-grown toenails. My Dad's feet are the worst. He's got a big fat corn and I love scraping it out. Honestly, just making bad feet good? I love that.' We return to the serious stuff. England won their seventh successive Six Nations in April. But they nearly blew a 31-7 lead in the final match against France and scraped home 43-42. 'That was the best thing that could have happened,' Aldcroft says. 'That second half showed we're not there yet. So this pre-season we've really dug in and gone for it. When we've got our foot on their throat we can't ease off.' England, with Aldcroft playing flank, dispatched France with conviction in their final warm-up match before the World Cup, winning 40-6 away from home. It was their 27th consecutive win. They also beat New Zealand convincingly, 49-31, last October and Aldcroft picks out the reigning champions, along with France and Canada, as England's biggest threat: 'We know that, when it gets to the World Cup, New Zealand switch it on again. So it's important we stay ahead of our game.' The Red Roses squad watched the semi-final and final together as England's Lionesses won the Euros and she says: 'It's an amazing time for women's sport and now it's our turn to do our bit and grow rugby in England.' There is just time for one last question. Will England win the World Cup? Aldcroft's answer is as swift as it is resolute: 'I believe that we will.'

Aasgard hopes strong season at Rangers can propel him to the World Cup
Aasgard hopes strong season at Rangers can propel him to the World Cup

STV News

timean hour ago

  • STV News

Aasgard hopes strong season at Rangers can propel him to the World Cup

Rangers summer signing Thelo Aasgard hopes to thrive in his first season at Ibrox, and cap it with a place at the World Cup with Norway. Aasgaard made the move to Glasgow last month after an impressive second half of the season with Luton Town. The former Liverpool academy player made his name at Wigan Athletic and his club career has been matched with progress through the age groups for Norway. That hard work culminated with a dream international debut in March, scoring and setting a goal up in Norway's 5-0 World Cup qualifier in Moldova. The 23-year-old admits that was the fulfillment of a childhood dream. 'Little moments like [that debut] you manifest throughout your career so for it to be reality is just fantastic,' Aasgaard told STV. His international career may be in its infancy but he's a man in a hurry, wanting to establish himself as a man Norway need if they reach the World Cup in North America next year. He believes Rangers can give him the platform to earn more caps and stake his claim for a place alongside Erling Haaland, Martin Odegaard and others. 'I think so,' he said. 'A big goal of mine is to play in the World Cup next year. 'So I want to show the manager that I want to fight for my place. 'I think playing European football helps. Playing in the top division in the country helps. Hopefully I can get a few caps. 'The World Cup's a massive goal and always has been since I was a kid.' The best way to achieve that goal is to be a success with Rangers as the Ibrox club look for domestic success and to enjoy continental football, starting with this week's Champions League play-off against Club Brugge. Rangers head coach Russell Martin has already spelled out what he wants to do, and now a 'frustrating' injury has cleared up, Aasgaard is ready to kick on. '[Martin told me] how he thinks show my qualities on the page, use my physique. Use my technical ability. 'He wants me to be part of the build-up phase, get some goals and get some assists. So I'll just be looking at doing that and settling in as quickly as I can. 'It was frustrating because I went last season injury-free, and it was a really good feeling at the end of the season knowing I had done all the right things to stay injury-free. 'Then this preseason, there was a few days when I was leaving Luton where I wasn't really training and there was a little bit of uncertainty around what I was doing. 'It was really frustrating and it's not nice watching from the stands.' Now he's back in action. Aasgaard is looking ahead to what he thinks can be a good year. 'I hope to achieve big things given the stature of the club,' he says. 'The support we get from the fans gives us a massive boost. 'The team is starting to gel together, certainly inside the training ground. 'I don't like putting limits on what we can achieve but I'm really excited for this season.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store