Hooper - Missing in the middle (6 March 1999)
Shammi Kowlessar looks at part of the career of Carl Hooper and sees a larger hole than expected
06-Mar-1999
6 March 1999
Hooper - Missing in the middle
The Trinidad Express
Shammi Kowlessar looks at part of the career of Carl Hooper
and sees a larger hole than expected.
Out of the way
Whatever happens from now on, Carl Llewellyn Hooper will go down in
the record books as one of the biggest disappointments in the history
of West Indies cricket.
Hooper is arguably the most elegant batsman produced in the Caribbean
since Lawrence Rowe two decades ago. He seems to have all the time in
the world to play and the only batsman on par with him as a player of
spin bowling is current world No. 1 Sachin Tendulkar.
When Hooper exploded onto the scene just over 11 years go after
enjoying a sensational youth career, the world seemed at his feet.
And he was just 20 in 1987 when he was called up against India to
follow in the footsteps of other legendary Guyanese batsmen like Rohan
Kanhai, Roy Fredericks, Clive Lloyd and Alvin Kallicharan. But 12
years and 78 Tests and later, he has not even qualified to carry their
cricket gear.
Not only has Hooper not lived up to enormous expectations justifiably
generated by his talents, he has not even lived up to the realistic
requirements of an average middle-order Test batsman.
Forty is a generally accepted benchmark of middle-order success;
Hooper has just brought his average UP to around 35.
But despite constant appeals for his head from many journalists and
fans through the years, the West Indies selectors have kept faith in
him.
To see him bat is to understand why. What keeps the selectors thinking
it very difficult to get rid of him, is precisely what makes so many
West Indies fans keep clamouring for him to be dropped.
His tremendous attributes notwithstanding, Hooper is perhaps best
known throughout the cricketing world for the infuriating habit of
getting himself out when he seems set to bat forever. And he always
seems to be constantly inventing new strange and comical ways to end
his innings.
But undisputed underachievement with the bat has not prevented Hooper
from making a valuable contribution to West Indies cricket.
His brilliance in the field-particularly in the close-catching
positions-has been a key factor in West Indies success over the last
decade or so. As has his much-improved off-spin bowling.
And although his batting remains overall a huge disappointment, it too
has improved over the last few years. Indeed, surprisingly, the
phlegmatic Guyanese has been the most consistent West Indian Test
batsman over the last two and a half years.
Since the West Indies and Australia last met in Australia at the end
of 1996, Hooper has been statistically the West Indies top performer
with the bat.
On that 1996 tour, he emerged on top of the WI batting averages and
aggregates in the Tests, scoring 362 runs at an average of 45.25 in
the 3-2 series loss. By comparison, Shivnarine Chanderpaul notched 296
(38.22 average) while Brian Lara got 296 at 32.88.
Hooper also finished the tour with the most runs, his 568 close to 100
more than Lara's tally and seven more than Chanderpaul's.
In the next series against India in the Caribbean in early '97, Hooper
ended with a disappointing 35 to finish fourth in the averages. But he
bounced back to top both the averages and aggregates in the next two
Test series.
In the brief two-Test series against Sri Lanka, which immediately
followed the India visit, Hooper scored 148 runs and averaged 49.33.
Lara had 120 at an average of 30 while Chanderpaul did not play
because of injury.
And although the Windies will want to forget their end-of-1997 visit
to Pakistan, in which they were embarrassed in all three Test matches,
Hooper's accomplishments will be remembered.
He scored 228 at an average of 45.60 while Chanderpaul could only
muster 153 at a paltry average of 25.5 and Lara 129 at 21.50.
Over the entire tour, Chanderpaul also finished behind opener Sherwin
Campbell with 201 runs at an average of 25.12. They were both miles
behind Hooper, who scored 374 runs at an impressive average of 74.80.
Next came the England tour of the Caribbean early last year. And
Hooper, who finished behind Lara in the Test averages, was everyone's
choice for Man of the Series. Almost everyone, since adjudicator
Joseph "Reds" Perreira named Curtly Ambrose.
The precedent had already been set as the last time England had been
in the Caribbean in 1995, Lara had scored 798 runs in the Test series,
including the world record 375, and "Reds" selected Ambrose as Man of
the Series.
After the humiliation by Pakistan, the Windies seemed certain to lose
the First Test until Hooper, with good support from David Williams,
produced an unbeaten, unblemished 94 to win the match and launch his
team's on the road to victory in the series.
He scored 295 in the five Test matches at an average of 49.16 and was
only overshadowed by new skipper Lara, whose 417 runs were scored at
an average of just over 52.
Hooper also claimed 15 wickets in the Tests and was the star of the
limited-overs series, a fact which was apparently disregarded in
determining Man of the Series honours.
Hooper has only scored nine Test centuries but in his 28 completed
innings from the 21 Tests since 1996-before the disastrous South
African series-he has notched four. Chanderpaul has scored two from 29
completed innings and Lara two from 35.
In that whole period, Hooper has scored 1,278 at an average of 45.64
while Chanderpaul has notched 1,212 at 41.79 and Lara 1,353 at 38.66.
And although the figures from South African stats considerably damage
these figures, Hooper still finishes on top overall at an average of
just under 40.
In the 5-0 whitewash by South Africa, he managed just 237 (average
23.7) but he also bowled 142 overs. And he was often out in the middle
batting as wickets were falling at alarming rates. Lara scored 310 at
an average of 31 and Chanderpaul, 266 at average of 26.6.
Hooper is missing from the line-up for the First Test that started
yesterday, having opted to remain at the side of his ill newborn son
in Australia.
Consistent regional performers Jimmy Adams, Dave Joseph, Roland Holder
are in the middle order in place of Hooper and the injured Shivnarine
Chanderpaul. But it may not be long before the voices that have been
clamouring for Cousin Carl's head may soon change their tune. Instead
of "Hooper dead" they may be singing "Hooper come back home".
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)