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The Surfer

A World Cup forever overshadowed

The Sunday broadsheets continue to try and make sense of Bob Woolmer's murder

Will Luke
Will Luke
25-Feb-2013
A Pakistan fan lights candles in memory of Bob Woolmer, March 21, 2007, Karachi

AFP

The Sunday broadsheets continue to try and make sense of Bob Woolmer's murder. In The Independent on Sunday, Nick Townsend says that the game Woolmer loved so much has been pushed firmly into the background. He also extends the theory that perhaps Woolmer knew too much about the darker side of the game.
From a World Cup of tantalising possibilities, it has become a Cup of Woe. Rather like the feeling of emptiness and despair which overcame us when the 1985 European Cup final proceeded while the bodies were still being removed at the Heysel Stadium, does anyone really care about the cricket?
Also in the Independent on Sunday, Stephen Brenkley gives a very personal tribute to Woolmer.
But his greatest virtue had nothing to do with his cricketing prowess. It was that he had time for everybody. There was no side to Bobby. In the high-pressure world of big-time cricket, he did not seal himself in a bubble. He wanted to embrace the whole world.
A common theme is also that Woolmer should have been England coach, probably back in 1999 when David Lloyd took over, and, even at the age of 58, would have commanded an interview to take over from Duncan Fletcher. Simon Wilde, in The Sunday Times, looks at Woolmer the coach
Meanwhile, in the Sunday Telegraph Mike Atherton insists the ICC can no longer decide the game’s future with the focus solely on money.
There is no suggestion that Woolmer's murder has anything to do with corruption. Even so, it is time for the administrators of the game to take note; time to put the game's long-term interests first, rather than the need to make decisions with purely money in mind, no matter what the consequences.
Just ask yourself why we have seen so many mis-matches in the opening week of the tournament and why there are more teams, 16, than ever before, even though some of them would struggle to beat a good London club side. With Ireland and Bangladesh going through to the second stage of the tournament, the ICC should be careful what they wish for.
The the same paper, Lord MacLaurin, the former chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, has called for a major review of the ICC.

Will Luke is assistant editor of ESPNcricinfo