No sympathy but strong talk
There were any number of suggestions of how the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) should have handled the players just back from their thrashing in New Zealand
Tony Cozier
23-Jan-2000
There were any number of suggestions of how the West Indies Cricket
Board (WICB) should have handled the players just back from their
thrashing in New Zealand.
They varied from an instant bush bath for all, to a year-long, allexpenses-paid holiday to Chechnya, to three months locked in a room
listening to The Economist, The Cement Man and Mr. Submissions on the
call-in programmes.
Ever a conservative organisation, the WICB is not inclined to such
extreme measures, even after the continuing humiliation of West Indies
cricket, and the executive committee that met the team last Friday
would have treated them with as much compassion and understanding as
possible.
Dr. Rudi Webster was called in to minister to the broken players and,
we were made to understand, Clarvis Joseph and his committee told them
they simply wanted to know what went wrong.
If that was the case, the day-long session was redundant. Everyone
knew what went wrong. It was spelled out often enough by captain,
coach and manager and, even on the other side of the globe, the live
TV coverage meant we could see for ourselves as he suffered through
it, night after night.
Lara acknowledged complacency after the great start in the first Test.
He said that not everyone was giving 100 per cent. The commitment
wasn't there. In his most factual assessment, he admitted the West
Indies were outplayed which, after losses by nine wickets and an
innings and 105 runs in the Tests and straightforward defeats in the
One-Day Internationals, was self-evident.
These themes have now become monotonous. They have been trotted out
following the similar debacles in Pakistan in 1997 and in South Africa
a year ago.
What was needed on Friday was not so much sympathy as strong talk,
similar to that which followed the South African experience.
Lara, manager Clive Lloyd and then coach, the late Malcolm Marshall,
were called to a meeting with a committee chaired by WICB president
Pat Rousseau and publicly admonished for weaknesses in leadership.
Lara was placed on probation for two Tests and told to make
significant improvement in his leadership skills.
What followed indicated that the message got through. Lara led from
the front with his brilliant batting and the series against the
powerful Australians was shared.
A culture of failure has become so entrenched that it will be hell to
shake it off. New players of the past few years have joined a team
that too rarely experiences the confident thrill of victory.
Lara, Lloyd and both recent coaches have repeatedly complained about
the standard of domestic cricket and the lack of quality players
coming through. These are undoubtedly pressing concerns but they are
largely unrelated to what now happens once the West Indies venture
outside the Caribbean.
Stacked up man-for-man prior to the series, the West Indies were
certainly not inferior to New Zealand.
The difference was that our men performed well short of their
potential, while theirs played above themselves.
Nor can the blame be shifted onto the loss of county cricket
experience, as valuable as that admittedly was. How many New
Zealanders, Australians or South Africans have developed through
seasons in England
The questions that have to be asked are more straightforward.
Why have our main middle-order batsmen - Lara, Shivnarine Chanderpaul
and Jimmy Adams - fallen away as drastically on overseas tours as the
accompanying statistics indicate It is not the newer players who let
the side down in Pakistan, South Africa and New Zealand but those on
whom the West Indies should be depending.
Why have fast bowlers of such potential like Franklyn Rose, who made
such an impression in his debut series, and Merv Dillon gone backwards
Why has Ricardo Powell not yet been able to remotely harness his
obvious and natural talent.
Zimbabwe are here in less than a month. The least experienced of the
Test countries, they have to play above themselves to compete - and
they will. Unless, and until, the West Indies can follow suit, we will
continue to be embarrassed.