1 October 1996
Brian Lara storms Bombay, accepts International Cricketer of the Year award
The encomiums - delivered by some of the greatest names in contemporary cricket - came thick and fast.
"My vision is of Brian Charles Lara leading the West Indies
cricket team into the 21st century," said Windies national team
manager Clive Lloyd. "I am proud to be part of a team that has
Brian Lara as vice captain. And I have no hesitation in saying
that he will be the one who leads West Indies cricket into the
next century."
Sunil Manohar Gavaskar, for his part, preferred to focus on the
occasions when he had personally witnessed the West Indies star
perform. "My first sight of him was in 1989," the Indian master batsman recalled. "Just as I was about to move out of the
hotel and was in the process of organising my luggage, this young
man came up and introduced himself. `I am Brian`, he said. I
sighted him again in the West Indies dressing room, and asked
Viv (Richards) who he was. `That is Brian,` Richards told me
then. `A marvellous player, he is going to be the world`s best
batsman`."
Richards had already discovered Lara`s potential, years before
the young left hander was to blaze a trail across the world`s
cricket pitches, Gavaskar pointed out.
Former Australian skipper turned commentator Ian Chappell, for
his part, spoke of his regret that he had missed Lara`s recordbreaking 375 against England. "But I watched him get 277 against
Australia at Sydney, and with me that day was Sir Garfield
Sobers," Chappell recalled. "Sir Garfield is the greatest cricketer I have ever come across, but he is not a great cricket
watcher. And yet he followed every single ball of that innings
from Lara, and you don`t get higher praise than that!"
The three - Gavaskar, Lloyd and Chappell - were adjudicators for
the first ever Ceat International Cricketer of the Year award,
and Lara himself the first recepient. The left-handed batsman,
who in course of the summer of 1995 broke not only the world
Test batting record set by Gary Sobers with his innings of 375
against England, but also went on to record the highest first
class score in cricket history when he scored 501 against Durham, received the Maestro Trophy and a cash award of Rs
500,000.
Chappell talked about the future of world cricket, arguing
that it was in very safe hands thanks to the presence of many
brilliant young batsmen in the world today. "Now we have
at- tacking batsmen like Sachin Tendulkar, Sanath Jayasuriya,
Aravinda de Silva and, of course, Brian Lara, who I feel
will do even better than the others because he has the ability
to hit the ball along the ground and is so good at placing the
ball."
Australian cricket writer and compere Mike Coward, emceeing
the evening, presented the speakers with his own brand of
knowledge and wit, while RPG head Harsh Goenka presented the
trophy and the cheque to Lara.
Source :: Rediff On The Net (https://www.redifindia.com)