ILT20 2024: Desert Vipers announce Colin Munro as captain at jersey launch in Dubai
Munro has been handed a squad with the core of that 2023 team retained, and some exciting new faces added, including Pakistani players Shadab Khan, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Azam Khan and Mohammad Amir.
Dubai, UAE (Jan 16, 2024) – The Desert Vipers today confirmed Colin Munro as the team’s captain for ILT20 2024.
Munro, who has arrived off the back of taking charge at the Brisbane Heat in the Big Bash League in Australia, said he was excited at the prospect of leading the team again and pinpointed what he thought was his best quality as a leader: “I think a little bit of maturity,” he said. “I think as a leader you must show vulnerability sometimes, because I am not perfect and I am never going to be perfect; I don’t expect the players to be perfect, but one thing I do expect is for players to plan and prepare really well.
Speaking at the jersey launch, Director of Cricket Tom Moody spoke about the team’s cricketing goals for the season, and he began by saying how important it was to retain the core of players from the previous season.
“We are looking to build a fan base here in the UAE and beyond the shores of UAE, where people can be familiar with the faces of those who represent the Desert Vipers. We also looked to improve on our squad; like every team we are looking to improve.
With sustainability at the core of Desert Vipers’ operations, the jersey launch maintained that theme as the captain arrived at Soul Beach along with UAE all-rounder Rohan Mustafa on a 5.48-metre rowboat called the Ocean Guardian.
The boat was rowed by its owner, Toby Gregory, the adventurer and environmental campaigner, and it was a green replacement for the motorized boat used for the jersey launch last year.
Founder of the Plastic Pledge and a Sustainability Impact Partner for the franchise, Toby together with two colleagues, rowed this very boat 5225 kilometres across the Atlantic Ocean 12 months ago, from the Canary Islands to Antigua.
Looking ahead, Gregory said the road towards being more sustainable was a long one: “The journey ahead for myself and the team is much greater as we seek to embed sustainability in everything the Desert Vipers do. They have made a great start and this reflects all the efforts the team is making, which is very different to any other sporting entity I am familiar with.”
The jersey reveal featured Colin Munro, who was wearing the match kit that has maintained the predominantly red look of season one, while Rohan Mustafa revealed the training kit, which is green and in keeping with the team’s green goals.
Meanwhile, the fan kit featured the text “Net Zero 2040 – The Vipers Pledge” on the front, once again confirming the team’s pledge to sustainability.
Adding to sustainability activations on the day was the presence of thirty students from Gems Metropole school in Dubai (part of the Desert Vipers school and community outreach programme), who volunteered to help with a beach clean-up activity and participated in a sustainability workshop held by Ben Hardy-Jones, the Desert Vipers sustainability manager.
The students gathered on the beach to welcome the players off the boat, waving the red Desert Vipers flags. They had the chance to interact with players and coaches attending the event, including Head Coach James Foster, fast bowling coach Azhar Mahmood, and players Bas de Leede and Michael Jones.
The Desert Vipers have already taken on the challenge of walking the talk, through an array of changes. An example is in the team room at the hotel where single-use plastic bottles have been replaced by a water dispenser, and all players have been given their own refillable bottles to use.
The coaches, players and management have backed these changes, said team CEO Phil Oliver. “Climate change really does affect cricket in a very serious way so we are just keen to do what we can and that really does for the strategic outlook for season two and beyond.
“I think we realise we have the opportunity as a sports team to do something different and that is what we aspiring to. It is a real breakthrough for a cricket team to do that in this region.
“The great thing is the players have bought into this and together we can do this. We have a story to tell, and we look forward to everyone joining us on this journey.”
Director of Cricket Tom Moody, too, said he believed the changes called for would not be hard to implement: “I do not think this affects the group at all,” he said.
“This generation of players are fully aware and conscious of what is happening out there with the globe and if we can make a small contribution in what we do, and set a standard as a sporting organisation, that is the least we can do.
“As far as how it affects the group, it is just a small behavioural change. We will still have the ability to get drinks, whether it is water or hydration drinks, easily, at the hotel or the ground or training ground. It is no big deal. It is just about making sure you bring your necessary drinking vessels with you and keep them full and cold and replenished.”
It is exactly this attitude from the Desert Vipers that encouraged Toby Gregory from Plastic Pledge to partner with the team: “I think there are lots of sporting entities locally and globally that want to be a part of environmental change but what really attracted me to the team is the mindset and the way they are doing things.
“It is not words it is action,” said Gregory. “From a Desert Vipers perspective, they should be commended because they really do look at what they are doing and see how they can do it better, and they are going to be willing to share that data across sports.
“So, not just from a cricketing perspective but from a global perspective, they are changing the game.”
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