New Windies low: Lara's men are bundled out for just 51 (9 March 1999)
Just when their supporters thought it couldn't get any worse, the West Indies collapsed to their lowest Test match total of 51 yesterday
09-Mar-1999
9 March 1999
New Windies low: Lara's men are bundled out for just 51
The Barbados Nation
Just when their supporters thought it couldn't get any worse,
the West Indies collapsed to their lowest Test match total of 51
yesterday.
The humiliating result was a mammoth 312-run defeat in the first
Test against Australia at Queen's Park Oval, Trinidad.
West Indies crumbled to 16 for five at lunch and were all out in
less than an hour after the break. The innings lasted only 19.1
overs with all 10 wickets falling in the last 11.
It was not the start fans had hoped for against cricket's
unofficial world champions after the West Indies were outclassed
by South Africa 5-0.
Pacemen Glenn Mc-Grath and Jason Gillespie did the damage but
several of the wickets fell to inept shots.
Man-Of-The-Match McGrath took five for 28 for his first
10-wicket Test match haul. He now has 50 victims against the
West Indies in 10 Tests.
Gillespie uprooted Pedro Collins' middle stump to end the
slaughter and finished with four for 18.
West Indies recorded their previous lowest total of 53 against
Pakistan in Faisalabad in 1986.
Yesterday's 102-minute mauling also erased the old record for
their lowest score against Australia - 78 in Sydney during
1951-52 - and their lowest score at home, 102 against England at
Bridgetown in 1934-35.
Skipper Brian Lara, appointed captain for only the first two of
the four Tests, said: "Our batting is struggling at the moment.
We, as a team, need to look at that immediately."
In Barbados, fans reacted with sadness.
"You cannot go from nought to 10 overnight," said one caller to
Voice Of Barbados, asking for patience after the South African
debacle. "If we couldn't even draw one with South Africa, how
the hell you expect to beat Australia?"
Another was downright pessimistic.
"What we need is a priest to pray - to pray for rain because
that is the only way that we are not going to be beaten 4-0."
The West Indies have little time to recover and regroup as the
second Test begins in Jamaica on Saturday.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)