Lloyd fuming, not pleased with targets set by board (26 February 1999)
West Indies manager Clive Lloyd has reacted angrily to the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) criticisms of his leadership
26-Feb-1999
26 February 1999
Lloyd fuming, not pleased with targets set by board
The Barbados Nation
West Indies manager Clive Lloyd has reacted angrily to the West
Indies Cricket Board (WICB) criticisms of his leadership.
Speaking to Australia's Melbourne Age on Tuesday, Lloyd blasted
the "performance targets" board president Pat Rousseau had set
for him as team manager, coach Malcolm Marshall and captain
Brian Lara.
An animated Lloyd, the West Indies' most successful captain in
history, appointed manager on a three-year contract in 1996,
scoffed at the plan.
He was quoted as saying: "Targets? The only target you can have
is to win. What targets can you give a coach? What targets can
you give a captain? Win one-and-a-half out of three, or one out
of four?
"You've got to win. That's the important thing. What specific
targets can you give anybody? We have the World Cup, and we have
a Test series here.
"We'd love to know that we can win them. We'll try to win them.
But targets?"
The 54-year-old Guyanese said that nobody had explained to him
what these targets were. He said the most important thing was to
win Test matches and that winning - like losing - was
contagious.
He also came out strongly in Lara's defence, rejecting rumours
that there had been a falling-out in South Africa between Lloyd
and Marshall, on the one side, and Lara on the other.
Lloyd said Lara, like himself, needed only to concentrate on the
target of winning. He expressed difficulty at precisely what
would happen if Lara failed to improve his punctuality.
"Supposing we win the two Test matches and he does not make any
runs," Lloyd said. "Supposing we lose both and he makes
hundreds. What do you do? What are the targets? What time does
Brian Lara have to spend with younger players? When a Test
series starts, or a One-Day series, it's normal for a captain to
be invited to go and talk to people and encourage them. He does
that, and I presume he does that for his island. What more do
they want him to do?"
Lloyd admitted that the Trinidadian left-hander was not a good
timekeeper, but there had been people like that in cricket. He
hinted at cricketers who "sleep through practice sessions. Denis
Compton, Keith Miller - they were like that. I saw some of the
English players here last year rushing out late. Wasn't Mike
Gatting once late for a game in Melbourne? It's not new.
"People are acting as if things that are happening now have
never happened before. If you highlight these things, and put
them in the Press, you're putting pressure on the players."
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)