Enough should now be enough (4 November 1998)
West Indies cricket is once again in a crisis, once again the man in the middle is Brian Lara, beside him is Carl Hooper, and once again the board has a decision to make
04-Nov-1998
4 November 1998
Enough should now be enough
Tony Becca
From The Boundary
West Indies cricket is once again in a crisis, once again the man in
the middle is Brian Lara, beside him is Carl Hooper, and once again
the board has a decision to make.
The decision, this time, should be easy. The board, in the interest
of West Indies cricket, should say to Lara and Hooper, enough is
enough, and suspend them - long enough for them to fully appreciate
that West Indies cricket is bigger than either of them and both of
them together.
According to the reports, some of the senior players want more money
for the tour of South Africa and extra money to attend the training
session which was scheduled to start tomorrow in Johannesburg.
While no one should question a man's right to ask for what he
believes his talent is worth, there is also the question of the
ability to pay and even if the players do not want to know, it should
be remembered the West Indies Cricket Board has a responsibility not
only to them but, in an effort to ensure that others follow, that
others get the opportunity they have had to the development of the
game throughout the region.
Payment, in every business, is also linked to performance and apart
from the fact the West Indies are no longer king of the road even if
Lara can talk about days gone by, Hooper certainly cannot.
In fact, he should be grateful to those selectors who, despite his
poor performances, his unfulfilled promise, kept selecting him while
fans were calling for his exclusion.
The important thing, however, is that there is a right and a wrong
way to go about seeking more money and to attempt to hold West Indies
cricket to ransom is not the way - certainly not by the captain and
vice-captain and definitely not after discussions were held between
the board and the players' representative and an agreement reached.
It is also important to remember this is not the first time that Lara
has flexed his muscles.
Apart from his tantrums during Richie Richardson's reign as captain
and also during Courtney Walsh's time when he openly said he should
have been the captain, Lara did so, for example, when he walked out
on the West Indies during the 1995 series in England and after he was
pardoned and fined 10 per cent of his tour fee, after he was selected
for the following tour and said nothing, he announced he would not be
going to Australia for the World Series Cup two days before the team
was scheduled to leave.
Hooper also has a history. Apart from the times when he has failed to
turn up for Guyana, he accepted the offer to go to the last World Cup
if selected and after he was selected he said nothing until a day or
two before the team was scheduled to leave for the tournament when he
announced he was not available.
Hooper is also the man who accepted the offer to captain the West
Indies at the Sixes tournament in Hong Kong and did not play after a
request for more money was rejected. And more recently, earlier this
year, he simply ignored the selectors and the coach when, after
inconsistent performances in the Test matches up to then, they asked
him to play in the Guyana/England game at Everest.
As bad as those indiscretions were, this is worse and it underlines
their selfishness.
As captain and vice-captain of the team, Lara and Hooper are leaders
and should be seeking solutions and avoiding confrontations.
On top of that, this is an historic tour. This is the first time the
West Indies will play a Test series in South Africa, during the years
of apartheid, the West Indies team was the favourite of many South
Africans and there are fans who have been waiting years to see the
Windies in action.
Lara and Hooper have once again embarrassed West Indies cricket and
they should not get away with a rap on the knuckles. The future of
West Indies cricket, as far as discipline and therefore performance
are concerned, may well depend on what the board does in Antigua
today.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)