
WARNER
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC:
CARIBBEAN GOVERNMENTS have been chastised for their
over-obsession with
cricket while allowing football to suffer
without providing much-needed funding.
Austin 'Jack' Warner, the Caribbean Football Union's (CFU)
president, told CMC Sports that regional governments had
neglected their responsibility to football but had proceeded
with building multimillion-dollar stadia to invest in a
'dying sport'.
"Many of them (governments) also too are still locked in
a time warp of colonialism where they believe that cricket
is the answer," Warner said.
"I make no apologies for saying to you that cricket, as
presently organized, is a dying sport and cricket has to
revitalize itself and certain things have to be done to save
cricket and governments can't save cricket by building fancy
stadia all over the place which they can't maintain and
which they say of course that
football can use. It is foolish."
Warner, also a FIFA vice-president, said while
governments needed to avoid political interference in
football associations, they had a responsibility to provide
funding and training.
He accused them of shying away from this duty and
expecting FIFA, the world governing body for football, to
provide all the necessary support for national associations.