Injury A Big Test For Walsh (20 November 1998)
Courtney Walsh is once more fighting a battle against the physical ravages of 14 years of international cricket in an effort to be fit for his 103rd and, in many ways, his most crucial Test a week today
20-Nov-1998
20 November 1998
Injury A Big Test For Walsh
by Tony Cozier in Bloemfontein
Courtney Walsh is once more fighting a battle against the
physical ravages of 14 years of international cricket in an
effort to be fit for his 103rd and, in many ways, his most
crucial Test a week today.
The Iron Man of fast bowling is handicapped by tendonitis in his
right knee and has had to be omitted from the West Indies 11 for
the four-day match against Orange Free State, starting here
today.
It is the last rehearsal before the first Test against South
Africa starts in Johannesburg next Friday.
Dennis Waight, the physiotherapist who has nursed Walsh's
various ailments all through his lengthy career, last night
placed his charge's fitness at 75 per cent but would venture no
predictions as to whether he would be ready.
History strongly indicates that he will.
In all that time of sweat and toil in the causes of the West
Indies, his native Jamaica and his adopted Gloucestershire,
Walsh has missed only one Test through injury, against India at
Kensington Oval last year when he had to give in to a strained
hamstring muscle.
He has repeatedly disregarded injuries that would have kept
lesser men on the physio's table. Most notably, he bowled with a
painfully cricked neck to help the West Indies to a famous,
series-level victory over India under his captaincy in India in
1994.
In early 1997, again under his leadership, he interrupted
Waight's treatment of the same hamstring that was to defeat him
in Barbados, limped onto the field and took five Australian
wickets in a face-saving win at Perth.
As his colleagues did lively sprints yesterday around Springbok
Park, venue for the Free State match, and took to the nets that
were forced indoors because of the heavy rain of the previous
day and night, Walsh cut a sorry figure. He was clearly careful
not to extend himself as he trotted around the boundary and,
later, with manager Clive Lloyd, delivered the drinks to the
indoor facility.
"Look what the old men have been reduced to," quipped the
54-year-old Lloyd who was captain when Walsh, now 36, made his
Test debut in Perth in 1984.
Walsh is only two wickets away from passing Malcolm Marshall's
West Indies record of 376 Test wickets, incentive enough for him
to be ready when play is called in Johannesburg. But it is his
competitive edge and his fierce determination, as much as
Waight's expertise, that will be the decisive factors in the
end.
Lara made it plain yesterday that he would rely on Walsh to make
the final decision.
"As long as he gets himself fit, he's a true professional and he
knows what it takes to perform at this level in a Test match,"
the captain said. "We are expecting 100 per cent from each
individual and, if they are not capable of doing that, they will
inform us and we'll have to look somewhere else."
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)