Maldives no place for sleepy Proteas
by Neil Manthorp 10/09/2002, 00:00
Not many people would complain about an unscheduled visit to the spectacularly beautiful Maldive Islands but on Monday morning Shaun Pollock's national cricket team had every reason to feel grumpy about the prospect.
Having flown the well established route to Dubai on Sunday night (they
flew there just a month earlier en route to Morocco) Pollock's team were
surrounded by what seemed like thousands of people making their way to Sri
Lanka for the ICC Champions Trophy.
Match Referees Mike Procter and Gundappa Viswanath, umpires Rudi
Koertzen and Russell Tiffin, the Pakistan cricket team and hundreds of
television production team members swarmed around Dubai airprort so it
seemed only natural that there were two flights scheduled within 10 minutes
of each other heading to Colombo.
The first, departing at 2:50 a.m., landed in the Sri Lankan capital at
10:00 a.m. The second, which left at 3:00 a.m., arrived in Colombo at a few
minutes before 1:00 p.m! The reason? A not widely publicised stop-over in
the Maldivian capital, Male.
"It looked beautiful, I must say," said new UCB Media Manager Gerald de
Kock, bravely keeping a smile on his face. "The team had all taken sleeping
pills so they didn't a thing, however!"
Fortunately, Supercricket's correspondent was on the earlier flight and
can exclusively reveal why South Africa's top players were "bumped" onto the
second flight. The Pakistan team occupied the business class seats on the
more desirable flight.
"If the SA team thought they had it bad, they might like to know the
Australian team had to fly from Dubai via Chennai (in India) because there
was no room for them and the Pakistanis," a member of the Emirates Air crew
explained early on Monday morning. So the Pakistan team always gets
priority?
"Yes," the steward explained with a smile. "That's just the way it is."