Basudeo Panday on the West Indies victory (17 March 1999)
"When the going got really tough, the really tough got going," Prime Minister Basdeo Panday said yesterday in a congratulatory message to West Indies captain Brian Lara following the team's victory over Australia in the second Test in Jamaica
17-Mar-1999
17 March 1999
Basudeo Panday on the West Indies victory
Ria Taitt
The really tough got going
"When the going got really tough, the really tough got going," Prime
Minister Basdeo Panday said yesterday in a congratulatory message to
West Indies captain Brian Lara following the team's victory over
Australia in the second Test in Jamaica.
Panday added: "The people of Trinidad and Tobago and the West Indies
could not have asked more of you as batsman and as captain," and
could not have asked more of the team. Noting that the triumph of the
West Indies team was a victory for the game of cricket, Panday said
it was cause of exultation throughout the Caribbean diaspora.
Government Senator Wade Mark also congratulated Lara and the West
Indies team on their success against the Australian team.
He said he hoped the team could continue to apply itself in a
disciplined, organised and competent manner. He noted that a number
of West Indians felt dejected as they saw the team "going down and
down". He said everyone was happy now.
Mark said the time had come for the Caribbean to focus very seriously
on a cricket academy where youths can be taught from a very tender
age. "We have taken cricket for granted in the Caribbean and as Errol
McLeod said, cricket has become a scientific game," Mark said.
He noted that the application of technology by several cricketing
countries was giving them that edge.
Asked in the Senate yesterday whether he agreed with Senator Martin
Daly that the team had turned the corner because of the
non-involvement of politicians, Mark said he did not believe in obeah
or voodoo or any other superstitious interpretation of reality.
He said everyone recognised the West Indies team was going through a
"bad patch" and was now getting back on its feet.
"I hope we can continue to move from strength to strength and apply
ourselves in a disciplined and organised fashion so that the West
Indian people would not have to go through these traumas of
heartaches in terms of the kinds of difficulties we have experienced
in the last period."
Sports Minister Manohar Ramsaran sent congratulations to Lara, saying
that he had proven once again "permanence of class as opposed to the
temporary nature of form which serves to provide challenges for us
mortals". Commending Lara on his "display of outstanding leadership
skills", Ramsaran said that this was an important step towards the
team's revival. "I implore you to keep the focus and continue to
nurture the emerging team cohesion and discipline as we rebuild a
strong West Indian cricket unit."
Opposition Leader Patrick Manning also sent a congratulatory message
to Lara on his performance. "It confirms your status as a superb
batsman and demonstrates your ability to overcome in the face of
adversity. Your leadership is refreshing and inspiring," he said,
adding that this must be the turning point to which the entire team
had aspired.
Independent Senator Daly, during his contribution in the Senate,
noted that the people of this country were not stupid.
"Indeed, once the politicians leave us alone we have a resilience.
May I say in passing that I attributed the revival of certain
sportsmen to the fact that certain politicians have left them alone.
The obeah of the motorcade has been lifted. It took a long time," he
said, adding, in response to a remark by one of his colleagues, "No,
I prefer obeah. Voodoo suggests things that we really don't like and
I am certainly not going to comment on that foreign investor (Benny
Hinn), which is what he was."
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)