Adam drops a catch

by frog

Great sportsmen rarely make great sports writers. Adam Parore offers a prime example of this in today’s Herald, with a column about the Zimbabwe cricket tour. He writes:

The other part of the issue that took me by surprise was the degree of confusion surrounding our country’s politicians, who seemed to have a very tenuous understanding of their subject matter.

First there was Phil Goff, treating the ICC like a colonial white man’s club, then Rob Donald prattling on about force majeur; Jim Anderton coming in with a suggestion from outer space, and then the token show of hands in Parliament.

It really showed the politicians up for what they were. Remember, the Government could have legislated to veto the tour, allowing the team to escape from their contractual obligations without penalty. It wouldn’t have worried the ICC a jot; Pakistan and India do it all the time.

But to instead call on NZC to withdraw illegally from the tour, knowing full well that such a move would effectively bankrupt the game here and lead to the Black Caps being ostracised on the international scene was pretty gutless, I thought.

What took me by surprise here was the degree of confusion surrounding our sportswriters, who seem to have a very tenuous understanding of their subject matter. The prime objective of Rod’s campaign was to get the Government to pass legislation to make the tour illegal, thus getting NZ Cricket off the contractual hook. To write a whole column which misunderstands this fundamental point was pretty brainless, I thought.

frog says

Published in Justice & Democracy by frog on Sat, July 30th, 2005   

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