“The blood drained from my body”, one parent said in a tour WhatsApp group, reacting to the news, adding that she was not volunteering to tell her son.
Dawson said the abandoned Indian adventure and another tournament Tyler cancelled on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast in July had cost parents of children coached at his academy more than $380,000 and caused reputational damage to his business, which also sustained losses of $40,000.
“It’s devastating on a lot of fronts,” Dawson said. “First and foremost, devastating for the kids and their parents who have invested a lot of money to try to put together a wonderful trip and experience for their kids. It’s devastating from a business sense. It’s very challenging to manage the fallout from this to make sure we’re doing all we can to support and assist our community.
Customers say that losses incurred as a result of Tyler’s company going under exceeded $1.1 million among families of cricketers training seven cricket academies, the academies themselves and other organisations. They include the King’s School ($46,475) and Baseball NSW, which is owed $202,635.84, according to a creditors report filed with ASIC by liquidator Shumit Banerjee, the director of Westburn Advisory.
ASIC documents show Tyler decreased his shareholding in Calypso Destinations on April 3, bringing on an investor, Kumar Satish, from Pune, India, as a minority stakeholder. By mid-April it had ceased trading, Tyler told the liquidator, and it was wound up with only $2418 in the bank and $15,000 in total assets.
Kevin and Andrea Tyler are listed as the largest creditor ($348,000). Others include National Australia Bank ($189,853.85), American Express ($128,000) and small business loan firm Bizcap ($124,000).
“Whilst my appointment is in its infancy, my preliminary investigations indicate that the impacts of COVID on the travel industry likely contributed to historical losses, which were carried forward up until my appointment,” said Banerjee, the liquidator.
“The director [of Calypso Destinations] has further advised that the tightening of the availability of credit placed greater strain on the company’s ability to obtain finance to meet current liabilities.”
Tyler did not return calls and text messages or answer questions sent to him by this masthead.
Tyler, who has captained Parramatta in fifth grade in the NSW Premier Cricket competition and played in other lower grades, had previously organised tours to destinations including England, New Zealand and Sri Lanka that provided experience in testing foreign conditions for ambitious teenagers striving to reach the professional ranks of the game. They had mostly been run well.
The first sign of major trouble came early last month when his company ran out of money to keep an eight-team inter-academy tournament he had organised going in India. It could only be completed because one of the players’ parents stumped up $88,000.
‘It’s a sad situation. People far smarter than me will judge [Tyler] for what he’s done.’
Former NSW representative cricketer Daniel Smith
“We just got stuck in India and we were lucky one of the fathers got us out of it,” said Brendan Lyon, the brother of Test spin bowler Nathan Lyon, whose Lyon Cricket Academy operates in Sydney and regional NSW.
Lyon and former NSW batsman Nic Bertus, co-owner of the Hills Cricket Academy, were also due to take teams to Barbados in July for an under-19 tournament there that was priced by Tyler at $8500 a head and which had been fully paid for.
That has also been called off with no restitution including for players themselves who took up jobs to save up and pay for the tour themselves.
“We want the best result of the kids, that’s why we’re really shattered by the whole situation,” said Lyon, who is fundraising to try and resurrect the trip.
“We see our academies as crucial to NSW and Australian cricket. We play a big role in producing a lot of the cricketers in the state. My energy is just going into ’how do I get those kids there?”
Bertus feels particularly slighted as Tyler worked in an office upstairs at his indoor cricket centre at Seven Hills and he knew him well enough to invite to his wedding.
“He doesn’t seem to understand what he’s done to people and how it’s affected them,” said Bertus, whose Hills Cricket Academy is owed $113,898.99, according to the creditors report.
“We’re just basically going to front the costs and re-book the boys on the [Barbados] tour. Just to make sure they get over there. We’re really determined to get them there and have the experience of a lifetime.”
Former Australian Test off-spinner Jason Krejza also coaches children whose parents have been left out of pocket by the travel operator’s collapse. He said some had fundraised to sent their children overseas in the first place.
Daniel Smith, a former NSW batsman who once held the record for the state’s highest score in an Australian domestic 50-over match, worked closely with Tyler as a contractor tasked with securing sales for Calypso Destinations.
He is resigned to not seeing the $78,000 in unpaid wages owed by the company but said that was not his priority.
“It’s a sad situation. People far smarter than me will judge [Tyler] for what he’s done,” Smith said.
“But it’s not my focus and concern. It’s just about the kids and the parents. These kids are the ones who have been hurt by all this.”
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