Five years, and 10 centuries - after 375 B.C.L. (19 April 1999)
Five years, and 10 centuries - after 375 B.C.L
19-Apr-1999
19 April 1999
Five years, and 10 centuries - after 375 B.C.L.
Earl Best
"No short-leg?" Geoff Boycott asked on the first day of the Fifth
Test at Centurion Park with the home team struggling on 280 for eight
and Walsh bowling the new ball to Allan Donald. "Extraordinary
captaincy!"
A year earlier, the exclamation would not have been suffused with
sarcasm. But in South Africa I can remember no commentator even
remarking on the insightful unorthodoxly that had always
characterised Lara's captaincy. Instead, the opposite was true as he
often conceded terrain where aggression was likely to be more
successful.
One psychologist theorises that, insightful as ever, Lara perceived
in the course of the Limited-overs tournament in Bangladesh that
preceded the tour, that his young team would be no match for the
supremely professional outfit that the South Africans had become. And
it was that anxiety crisis that led to the showdown with the WICB and
his apparent loss of form.
But it was more than form that went. Tony Cozier described the
normally zesty captain as "a sad and forlorn figure" towards the end
of the tour.
Things might have got worse after the mauling at Queen's Park. But
three things had happened quietly. Forgetting old resentments and
finding a new humility within himself, Lara had approached Cozier for
advice. and, high in the stands at the Newlands Ground in Cape Town,
the pair had talked for an hour about "the state of West Indies
cricket".
The second was that the WICB had attached a psychologist to the team
and he had evidently started at the head.
And finally to the psychologist carrot had come the baton of a
two-match probation. Shape up, the Board had told him publicly, or
you're history.
At Sabina, he shaped up and made history.
His magnificent double century at Sabina haul his team, his country
and himself back from the verge of oblivion.
Then at Kensington, the Prince of Port of Spain seemed to underline
the durability of the transformation by scoring an unparalleled-and
almost unprecedented-second innings century to give the West Indians
a totally unforeseen and totally unforeseeable-2-1 advantage in the
series.
One English writer compared him to Bradman.
It might have been, hindsight suggests, designed to induce a false
sense of security in the soon-to-be-30-year-old captain who is known
to make a habit of reading any and everything written about his
cricket.
And going largely uncountered by more realistic down-to-earth
assessments that anchored the shimmering present in the relatively
recent unglorious past, it might have gone to his head.
At Kensington when the situation demanded unspectacular protracted
occupation, he offered pyrotechnics-and paid the price. Australia
tightened the screws and retained the trophy.
But Lara has at least managed to vindicate Tim Hector's unshaken
conviction that at the core there is steel. And he is indeed one of
those individuals who, perceiving his and our predicament, as the
Trinidad and Tobago Review writes, "dig deep within themselves to
find the wherewithal to lead because they accept that their own
pre-eminence gives than that responsibility".
But the last word comes from Cozier.
"It is principally up to him to ensure that it isn't temporary."
And if he does, there can be no doubt that soon the whole West Indian
community will demand that his application for a place in the
pantheon be stamped, in bold purple, "Approved".
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)