Academy overdue
At last something to bring a smile of satisfaction to the lips of West Indies cricket fans that, for so long, have been pursed in a cheups
Tony Cozier
16-Jan-2000
At last something to bring a smile of satisfaction to the lips of West
Indies cricket fans that, for so long, have been pursed in a cheups.
While we should not get carried away by the three convincing and
successive victories of the Under-19s in the Youth World Cup in Sri
Lanka last week, it was encouraging news after the drubbing of the
senior team in New Zealand and the general negativity it has again
invoked.
Such results do not, in themselves, signify an instant transformation
in recent ill-fated fortune. We are, after all, talking about
teenagers in a limited-overs tournament and tougher opponents are
still to come at the Super League stage.
But it does represent a significant turnaround. In the last Youth
World Cup in South Africa two years ago, the West Indies were beaten
by Zimbabwe and Bangladesh, as well as Australia, and finished a lowly
tenth of 16.
What the performances have again highlighted, no matter what happens
from here on in Sri Lanka, is the need for the repeatedly talked-about
academy.
The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) can wait no longer to get it off
the ground. It has already wasted time enough while most of the other
countries have got theirs functioning and producing.
Without such a facility, the youngsters will return from Sri Lanka to
a state of limbo.
A few will be chosen for their senior teams for the closing stages of
the Busta Cup and get a game or two against Zimbabwe and Pakistan
later in the season.
Some will filter back into the current club seasons of their
territories. Others, like the Barbadians and Guyanese, will not even
have club cricket to occupy them until May.
They would be best served joining an academy for, say, a period of six
months to continue their cricketing education and development.
Such institutions are designed to be the finishing schools for those
identified from age-group tournament as having the talent and
potential to proceed to the highest level.
Technology
As was clear from a BBC World Service programme last week reporting
the South African version, they concentrate on every aspect of the
game, putting the latest technology to full use.
They polish the basics, mend technical flaws and accentuate mental
toughness. Above all, they aim to produce rounded individuals with a
respect for the game and without the hang-ups and haughtiness that
bring down so many gifted young sportsmen.
The Australian Academy was the prototype. Its benefits have been plain
to see through the success of so many of its products. The rest have
followed with similar results.
The West Indian academies used to be our schools but times have
changed. This is no longer the case even though Combermere have shown
what can be achieved by its innovative introduction of Roddy Estwick
as full-time cricket master, just as Ellerslie did under Irving Harris
in the 1980s.
Something more specialised and modern is now needed. St. Kitts
initiated theirs, albeit on a small scale, a few years back. The
Trinidad and Tobago board is getting theirs ready.
Wherever it is located, time is of the essence. There is now an
exciting bunch of teenagers, or those just out of their teens, to work
with. The majority are in Sri Lanka but there are others like Ricardo
Powell, Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan, Sylvester Joseph, Matthew
Sinclair and Sulieman Benn who require careful nurturing.
Our club and first-class cricket was once so strong that they provided
the ideal preparation for the transition to the international game. It
gave the final polish to those who shone at school.
Test debut
Derek Sealy came straight from class at Combermere to Kensington to
make his Test debut against England in 1930. Garry Sobers was a Test
player at 17.
These are just a sampling of the many who comfortably made the jump.
As is evident even at A team level, it is no longer that easy.
The depth to which the quality of the first-class tournament, the
Busta Cup, has sunk and the lack of foresight of the board in
scheduling it to start as early as it did this season is exposed by
a few startling statistics.
With the Test players away in New Zealand, Carl Hooper stuck in
Australia, Vasbert Drakes and Ottis Gibson plying their trade in South
Africa, seven stalwarts all retiring at the same time and the best
teenagers in Sri Lanka, the first two rounds of Busta Cup 2000 were
left with little of substance.
There is only one batsman presently around, yes ONE, with a
first-class average better than 40 and only two more with over 35.
Only seven bowlers had more than 100 wickets.
The batsmen were Keith Arthurton (46.53), Roland Holder (39.83) and
Philo Wallace (37.11); the bowlers Curtly Ambrose (873), Cameron Cuffy
(157), Rawl Lewis (135), Roy Marshall (129), Mahendra Nagamootoo
(111), Warrington Phillip (139) and Laurie Williams (124).
Yet the WICB issued a Busta itinerary that eliminated the best and the
most promising players from the first two rounds.
By delaying the start by two weeks, scheduling the two semifinals
simultaneously and carding the final at the same time as Zimbabwes
opening match against the Board XI, the Test men would have been
available for the duration and the Under-19s back for the last three
rounds, instead of just one.