ST. LUCIA EXECUTIVE PROMISES BEST CRICKET WORLD CUP
NEW
YORK (January 24, 2007) – Dr. Ernest Hilaire, Chief Executive Officer
of Cricket World Cup, St. Lucia Inc., leading the island's hosting of
both the first round and a semifinal of this year’s ICC Cricket World
Cup, promises the Caribbean will deliver the best World Cup ever.
Speaking to Caribbean-Americans at “The Mangoville Bar and Grill” in
Queens over the weekend, Dr. Hilaire reminisced that a few years ago
when the West Indies won the right to host the world’s biggest cricket
spectacle, many skeptics believed small island nations would never be
able to do it. “But we told them ... and we are going to deliver to the
world the best Cricket World Cup.”
The cricket administrator said that throughout the years the West Indies
had introduced a more exciting way of both playing and enjoying cricket.
“And in 2007, we will show the world a different way of hosting a
Cricket World Cup,” adding that St. Lucia is proud to be part of the
regional endeavour.
But cricket is not just about play on the field, said Hilaire. “It’s a
celebration of life, it’s the way we as West Indians love living. It’s
not about sitting down in a stadium and clapping for every four and
every wicket. It’s about liming the night before, fêting just before the
match, celebrating during the match, and of course liming and fêting
after the match. There will not be a boring moment in the West Indies.
It will be 47 nights of festivals and excitement.”
Hilaire, who holds a PhD in international relations from the London
School of Economics and Political Science, invited members of the
Diaspora to be part of the action in St. Lucia and the Caribbean. “This
is an event that no West Indian should miss, it’s an event that no
cricket supporter should miss, and certainly not an event any West
Indian supporter should miss at all,” he said, adding that on display
will be some of the finest quality cricket venues in the world.
St. Lucia’s Director of Tourism, Maria Fowell, told the audience that
St. Lucia had a wide variety of accommodations to offer cricket fans.
“You choose your pick ... from luxury villas to small inns, all-inclusives
to EP (European Plan) hotels, on the beach, in a mountain, up the hill,
down the hill, whatever you desire, I am sure that we can offer you
something,” and she added that activities on the island are plentiful.
Chaitram Persaud, sales manager of TravelSpan Vacations, one of the
official cricket travel agents and co-hosts of Saturday’s event, said
his company always associates itself with beauty, encouraging attendees
to select TravelSpan for their travel arrangements to St. Lucia, “so
that you can be there to see a West Indian victory.”
St. Lucia has earned CWC 2007's "Blue Package" which includes six first
round or group stage matches between Canada, England, Kenya, and New
Zealand in Group C in March 2007, and the semifinal between the number
one (1) and four (4) teams in April. Jamaica will host the other
semifinal and Barbados handles the final.
Tickets were still available for the first round matches, while the
semifinal, which will attract 20,000 spectators, had already been "sold
out" in the public ticketing phase, with tickets only available through
the purchase of packages from official tour operators (www.cricketlogistics.com)
and from the Corporate Hospitality programme (sumitra.jagroop@cricketworldcup.com).
Besides St. Lucia, the ICC Cricket World Cup West Indies 2007 will be
held in Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St.
Kitts and Nevis and Trinidad and Tobago. St. Vincent and the Grenadines
will host a number of the warm-up matches.
For more information about ICC Cricket World Cup West Indies 2007, visit
www.cricketworldcup.com.