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November
15
West Indies threaten
another walk-out if crowd misbehaves
AHMEDABAD: The West Indies would not hesitate to abandon
Friday's fourth one-day international against India here
if the safety of the players was at risk, team manager
Ricky Skerritt said.
"Of course we want the remaining four matches in
the series to be completed, but if the players are at
risk, we will walk out again," Skerritt said ahead
of the day-night match at the Motera stadium.
The tourists lead 2-1 in the seven-match series marred
by crowd trouble in all the three games played so far in
Jamshedpur, Nagpur and Rajkot. The West Indians walked
off the field at Rajkot oTuesday when Vasbert Drakes and
substitute fielders Ryan Hinds and Pedro Collins were
targetted with sand-filled plastic bottles.
Match referee Mike Procter of South Africa abandoned
play and awarded the game to India, who were cruising at
200-1 in the 28th over chasing a victory target of 301
in 50 overs. Procter's decision was based on India being
ahead on run-rate at that stage as per the
Duckworth-Lewis system used primarily for rain-hit
matches.
Security was further tightened for Friday's match here
in the main city of the sensitive western state of
Gujarat where some 1,000 people were killed in communal
violence earlier this year. Procter held a meeting with
senior police and cricket officers on Thursday in which
it was decided that every spectator entering the stadium
would be frisked.
"We will not allow spectators to carry anything
inside the ground that could be used as missiles to hit
the players," a police officer said. "Among
the 2,000 security personnel who will be on duty, many
plain-clothed policemen will be seated in the stands to
identify miscreants."
With tensions running high in Gujarat ahead of next
month's state elections, officials are leaving nothing
to chance. Though Rajkot is only a two-hour bus drive
away from Ahmedabad, both teams were transported by air
to Bombay on Tuesday evening and flew in to Ahmedabad
late on Wednesday night.
Meanwhile, Procter's unprecedented decision to declare
India winners at Rajkot -- the first time a host team
has been awarded a crowd-marred match -- has stirred a
heated debate.
Former West Indian great Michael Holding, here as a
television commentator, said such a decision would
encourage crowds to create trouble when it found the
hosts were ahead on run-rate. "Very shortly,
spectators will be seen going into the one-day venues
with computers with the Duckworth/Lewis formula in hand
and constantly keeping in touch with the
proceedings," Holding wrote in his column.
"Whenever their team is in front, they will just
throw a few missiles, get the game called off and their
team ends up the winners."
Procter defended his decision saying he did not want to
penalise players for the actions of unruly crowds.
"India made a fantastic start. They deserved to
win. They were ahead (on run-rate)," the former
South African all-rounder said.
The International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport's
world governing body, as threatened to ban unruly venues
from holding matches. The Ahmedabad crowds will be on
trial. In a Test match here in 1987, Pakistan captain
Imran Khan ordered his fielders to wear helmets after
objects were hurled at them on the field. The last three
internationals will be played in Baroda, also in Gujarat
(Nov 18), Jodhpur in Rajasthan (Nov 21) and Vijayawada
in southern Andhra Pradesh.
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