P.S: Anyways what did Deano say??
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,21718854-662,00.html
Pretty interesting read.
Dean Jones backs tour
Dean Jones
May 13, 2007 12:00am
I KNOW I'll cop a lot of flak for saying this, but Australia's cricketers must go to Zimbabwe in September.
We have a moral responsibility, as the world's best cricket team, to look after cricket and spread the word about the sport.
And the country that needs us most right now, for the sport and not the politics, is Zimbabwe. I used to believe we should not tour there, but that was before I worked there in the media.
A lot of people explained to me that seeing the Australians would be a tremendous boost for the country's youth. It would inspire them to take up the game, rather than go back to a life of crime.
We as a nation are making a lot of political noise about President Robert Mugabe -- and rightly so. His is a ruthless regime and the sooner the dictator is gone the better the country will be. But the cricketers have a chance to go there and make a protest. If they don't go, they will forfeit that opportunity.
The last time the Australians toured, Mugabe did not turn up to a game. If he fronted this time, the Aussies could refuse to take the field to meet him. Now, that would be a significant protest. It would show the world what Australians think of this man.
I have sympathy for Cricket Australia because it is damned if the team goes, and damned if it doesn't. It is all well and good for the Government to say it will pay the $2.4 million penalty for not touring. I'm sure Mugabe would say it cost his country millions more than that, and how could we query that from afar?
And there is no guarantee Zimbabwe cricket would receive the money. The International Cricket Council could send it, but what would there be to stop Mugabe from snatching it -- as he has with much financial reward in his country?
More important to me is the moral obligation I feel we have as the world's best cricket country to make the tour.
We owe Zimbabwe. We owe it big time for past favours.
When many of Australia's top cricketers took the blood money and went on the rebel tour of South Africa, Zimbabwe helped provide experience for our next generation to develop quickly.
I was one of them. I made my first overseas tour there in 1984 under Dirk Wellham. I went again in Robbie Kerr's team in 1985. Zimbabwe obliged with a tour by New South Wales, a team that included the young talent of Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh.
That was a period when we in Australia were looking for help and Zimbabwe came to the party.
I think in its time of need, given the state of the nation and its loss of Test status, that we have an obligation to say thanks for past help.
Having been there a few times in recent years, I can tell you that the opportunity to see this great Australian team would be a major boost to cricket in Zimbabwe. If we don't go, so many children will miss a lifetime chance to be influenced by the elite of the game. In the current climate, the option is to turn to crime. We owe these Zimbabwean kids a glimmer of hope in a land of misery.
I know this is a complex situation. The Government doesn't want our players to tour because it would appear we are giving Mugabe a chance to say his rule cannot be too bad because Australia sends its champion team.
At the same time, the Government won't impose trade restrictions on the country because it believes that would hurt only the suffering population.
I say the same about the cricket. The only people to be penalised if we don't go will be the suffering public.
This team knows it has responsibilities. If it is given permission by the Government to tour, it will take up the challenge.
Our cricketers will put on a great show to prove to Mugabe that this game is special -- and he is not.