westozfalcon wrote:I thought it was a disgrace that the Aussies wore blue caps with a VB logo in that West Indies tour match
Responding to criticism, the argument from the CA spin doctors was that not everyone in the side actually had acquired a Test cap and that they wanted uniformity.
Bollocks. It was a very tacky marketing gimmick.
The players who hadn't yet received a baggy green could have worn a white sun hat with the Aussie logo. After all they are still representing Australia, it's just not in a Test match.
I know a bit about baggy green caps, presentation of them, right to wear it etc, from a previous job life. I can speak from experience to the end of 1999, and happy to be told if things have changed since then.
Baggy green caps were always awarded to players who had made tour squads to go overseas, even if they had not played Test cricket to that point. Obvious examples in my time are Wayne Holdsworth (1993 Ashes tour), Ricky Ponting (1995 West Indies tour) etc etc. Those players had the right, and did, to wear their caps in tour games, because they were representing an Australian XI. However, it was also viewed they should never wear their caps when subbing in a Test match, because they hadn't actually been part of a Test, and not earned the right to wear it.
Every player who was picked for an Australian test team / tour party, up to the end of 1999 was always given a baggy green as part of his tour kit. Trust me, I was there to see them hand them out, and the first thing they did was try them on.
However, for the public, it was formally re-presented on the morning of their first Test match, and the player himself took that moment as the time where he could wear it in a Test.
On the weekend, the team should never have worn a sponsor cap. If they have now changed their idea and say you can't wear the baggy green until you've earned it, that's fine, but those guys should have been hatless, or worn a floppy with the coat of arms on it.
Roger Woodcock -- 602 goals from a forward flank makes you a legend.