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Kevin Pietersen
Cash incentive: England captain Kevin Pietersen and his team-mates stand to win £500,000 a man if they beat the West Indies

£10m Stanford match is saved by peace deal

David Lloyd, Cricket Correspondent
9 Oct 2008


England's £10million cricket match in
Antigua next month is set to go ahead following a peace deal in the Caribbean.

The sport's richest ever contest, between Kevin Pietersen's team and the Stanford Superstars, was thrown into doubt on Tuesday when the High Court in London ruled the West Indies Cricket Board could no longer sanction the game because of a commercial dispute involving a sponsor.

That meant all the leading Caribbean players, like Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ramnaresh Sarwan, would be forced to pull out — leaving the winner-takes-all Twenty20 match virtually dead and buried.

With £10m at stake — including £500,000 a man for Pietersen and Co if they manage to win on
1 November — negotiations began immediately to save the day. It is understood a compromise was agreed late last night and will be formally announced later today.

At the heart of the dispute was the WICB's decision to hand the rights of the match to Sir Allen Stanford, thereby freezing out their
long-term sponsor, Digicel.

Not surprisingly, the telecommunications giant was furious and launched a case to have its branding on show when the game is played at Stanford's private ground close to Antigua's international airport.

Digicel demanded to have its company logo on the Superstars shirts as it had argued that the side were a West Indies international outfit in all but name.

A peace deal was apparently struck during a telephone call between Sir Allen (right) and Digicel's boss, Denis O'Brien. But the final details must still be ratified by the WICB, who were due to meet later today.

Although a compromise was always likely, the agreement will still come as a big relief in both England and the West Indies.

England Cricket Board officials see the game — the first of five annual contests — as an important development in the great Twenty20 revolution.

And cricket in the West Indies, struggling to stay alive, needs the cash and high profile that
Stanford's matches will bring.

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