26 April 1999
Hoops runs out on WI
Garth Wattley
"IT came as a shock to us, seeing that we have only one more game here
and this is the same squad that will be going to the World Cup,'' said
West Indies manager Clive Lloyd.
"It was a great surprise to me,'' declared West Indies legend Sir
Garfield Sobers.
For the past 12 years since he made his international debut, the West
Indian public has tried in vain to fathom the mystery that is Carl
Llewellyn Hooper.
And yesterday, Sunday April 25, 1999, the enigma of Caribbean cricket
caught them out again by announcing his retirement from international
cricket.
Overnight, following the WI's four-wicket defeat by Australia in the
Sixth Cable and Wireless One-day International, Hooper dropped the
bomb on Lloyd.
Not even the most effortless of the many effortless strokes he has
played in his career could have left the team more dumbstruck. "We are
very disappointed. To replace someone like Carl Hooper is not easy,''
Lloyd said.
The retirement of Hooper, the 33-year-old veteran of 80 Tests and 182
ODIs, has presented an immediate problem for the West Indies Cricket
Board. One week before the team is due to depart for England and the
World Cup they must find an eleventh hour replacement.
In an initial press statement on the matter, WICB Chief Executive
Officer said that, "the WICB would have to apply to the International
Cricket Council Technical Committee for the World Cup '99 to draft a
new player into the squad.''
The release also indicated that Hooper had informed Camacho of his
retirement with immediate effect on Saturday night and that
confirmation in writing was to be delivered yesterday.
But for the public, news was scant until the WICB statement that was
read out over the public address system at lunchtime yesterday. That
announcement was met by cheers from many sections of the ground.
It was a strange response, especially from a Kensington Oval crowd
that had affectionately dubbed the strokemaker "King Carl'' and has
traditionally been solidly behind him.
But the response reflected the mixed emotion that the enigmatic
batsman has always evoked among the cricketing public. It also
underlined the decline in his fortunes.
Returning from Australia where he was at the bedside of his ailing
son, Carl Llewellyn III, Hooper failed to make any impact in the final
two matches of the Test series.
On Saturday, not for the first time this season "Hoops'' was run out
for eight in his last innings for WI. To make matters worse,
he made a number of uncharacteristic fumbles in the field. Ironic
cheers and jeers hounded him all day.
"He just said he was not enjoying it. And if you're not enjoying your
job, then I think yes, he should give it up,'' Lloyd added,
"But I think he's a class allrounder and probably one of the finest
batsmen around. I'm sorry he's cut short his career.''
Though surprised by the announcement, former West Indies selector and
manager David Holford had sensed that all was not well with "Hoops.''
"He obviously is not enjoying the game any more. I think you could
sense that from watching on. And I suppose yesterday (Saturday) was
the last straw was when he was booed.''
"As we all know,'' Holford continued, "he has not quite performed to
expectations. But his performance was pure magic for people who
watched him bat.''
But an average of 33.76 in Tests and 35.47 in ODIs testifies to his
continuing underachievement.
The statistics notwithstanding, LLoyd would dearly love another chance
to solve the enigma of West Indies cricket once more in England.
"It's going to be a bit of a blow. You don't want to lose such a class
player at this stage. We were all thinking of this whole squad going
to the World Cup. But fellows have realised that they've got to move
on.''
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)