Nothing should really stop Brian Lara
Brian Lara is still capable of being a world-beater
Haydn Gill
12-Oct-2001
Brian Lara is still capable of being a world-beater.
That's the opinion of Ian Bishop, manager of the Trinidad
and Tobago team for the Red Stripe Bowl in which Lara showed
some of his old magic with a commanding century against
Northern Windwards.
Bishop's comment adds to the growing discussion following
Sir Everton Weekes' statement a few weeks ago that the
double world record-holder may be past his best.
That statement is something that I wouldn't apply to any
sportsman because when you look back on a career, at some
point there is going to be a high point that you can always
look back on, Bishop told WEEKENDSPORT yesterday.
[But] there is nothing that should really stop Brian Lara
from consistently scoring runs as long as he goes on playing
the game.
If Sir Everton was alluding to whether he would score 375
again that's a Herculean effort and it may never happen but
it doesn't mean that Brian Lara cannot be a worldbeater.
The 32-year-old Lara set world records for the highest Test
and first-class scores during a six-week period in 1994, but
his high standards have declined in recent years to the
extent that his Test average has slipped from the high 50s
to 47.
His most recent phenomenal scoring was in the 1999 home
series against Australia, when, as captain, he was under
probation by the West Indies Cricket Board and responded
with centuries in three successive Tests that earned West
Indies an unlikely 2-2 series result.
He is still a world-beater and when he puts his mind to it,
he can still do what the team requires and be outstanding,
Bishop said.
I still think he has a lot of cricket left in him and not
only for Trinidad and Tobago.