Davis: Leadership letting T&T down (29 April 1998)
Bryan Davis, cricket coach of the Trinidad and Tobago President's Cup team, was playing his cards close to his chest yesterday
29-Apr-1998
Wednesday, April 29, 1998
Davis: Leadership letting T&T down
By GARTH WATTLEY Sports Desk
"I DON'T' think there is any one specific reason that I could
give for Trinidad falling second-to-last."
Bryan Davis, cricket coach of the Trinidad and Tobago President's
Cup team, was playing his cards close to his chest yesterday.
But in summing up another disappointing showing by the senior
team, he could not escape talking about attitudes gone awry and
leadership-to a degree-that's not working.
"You don't play professional cricket by chance," Davis told the
Express. "Professionalism is not being paid to play a game; it is
how you approach a game. We lack professionalism in our approach,
both the cricketers and in the whole organisation of the game
itself."
There were sharp words coming from the former national player on
the just-concluded season in which the national team again failed
in their bid to take the regional first-class title which they
last won in 1985. And there will be many more in the report he
has been commissioned to submit to the Trinidad and Tobago
Cricket Board.
In analysing the season, Davis noted that "there was no
deterioration, there was no improvement; it was just a matter of
winning the first and last matches outright. And in between, it
was just crumbly!" But it was those mis-steps in mid-season,
according to Davis, that highlighted the local team's
problems-especially the loss of first innings points in Jamaica
over the Carnival weekend.
"I feel that is where our resolve fell down a bit," Davis said.
In that game, T&T played with virtually ten men because of a back
injury to Rajindra Dhanraj and a forgotten passport that forced
middle-order batsman Lincoln Roberts to miss the flight.
"If you are playing with 10 men, you have to fight more," the
coach added, "but some people seemed preoccupied with the
Carnival weekend." So was commitment a cause for concern this
season?
"Definitely," Davis concurred. "How could you have a very
powerful commitment when you go down to Guyana and it's only when
you get down there that the captain says he's not playing?"
After presenting a doctor's certificate stating that he was
suffering from fatigue and exhaustion, national skipper Brian
Lara sat out that game which T&T eventually lost by 22 runs.
Davis continued: "So at a moment's notice, Phil Simmons has to
take over. Now we are down to 12 men and we even had a Guyanese
fielding substitute for us one of the days. What kind of team
spirit will you develop out of that?"
The coach was also concerned about the signals sent to the team's
younger players this season.
"You have young chaps on the team, (Daren) Ganga, Mukesh Persad,
and Roberts, they will feel inspired by being on the same team
with Lara, the world's best batsman, the West Indies captain and
so on. So when he suddenly drops out of the team, everybody has
to readjust....In cricket, the captain is the most important
element."
Asked further if he felt the team as a whole suffered from a lack
of leadership, the coach replied this way.
"It was a problem because Lara was not always available and they
had to change up the captaincy too much at a moment's notice."
Focussing more closely on the actual performances, Davis noted
that "Dinanath Ramnarine pleased, Richard Smith almost doubled
what he did before in any particular year and we had young Ganga
who also came on later in the season and made a hundred."
But the coach also lamented other inconsistent efforts, many from
the team's senior players.
"If you bring in more youths there, they'll (the team) collapse,"
Davis said, quickly discounting the need for new blood.
"But the seniors are really not doing their job up there. How are
you going to win two games outright and lose two outright,
something has to be wrong!" But the coach insisted that the
answers lie not with preparation or lack of technique or with how
all the players, cricketers and administrators play the game, but
how they think it.
"Attitudes have to change," Davis insisted. "And that can't
change over one or two years. You have to have somebody in
charge, not only of the preparation of the team but somebody who
has a rapport with the senior players, who have to toe the line."
Perhaps when the TTCB have read and studied Davis's report,
national cricket will be clear on just where to draw the line.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)