Odds against West Indies revenge (12 February 1999)
In 1995 when Australia turned up in the Caribbean and handed the West Indies their first defeat in 15 years and the first by the Aussies in 19, the disappointed local fans said wait until the next time
12-Feb-1999
12 February 1999
Odds against West Indies revenge
The Jamaica Gleaner
In 1995 when Australia turned up in the Caribbean and handed the West
Indies their first defeat in 15 years and the first by the Aussies in
19, the disappointed local fans said wait until the next time.
In 1996-97 when they won again, this time at home, an angry Brian
Lara shouted ... wait until you come to the West Indies in '99.
Well, '99 is here and Australia, the unofficial but undisputed
champions of world cricket, are on their way. The fans, however, are
not looking forward to the contest and neither can Lara. In the four
years since they knocked the West Indies off the throne, Australia
have been going from strength to strength. The West Indies, however,
have been sliding - especially in the two years since Lara's threat.
In those two years, the West Indies lost all three Test matches in
Pakistan - two by an innings and one by 10 wickets, and although they
defeated England 3-1, they lost all five in South Africa - the first
by four wickets, the second by 178 runs, the third by nine wickets,
the fourth by 149 runs and the fifth by 351 runs.
The four-match series, therefore, brings together a team bubbling
with confidence and one trying to put the pieces together and
although the West Indies are expected to put up a better fight than
they did against South Africa, the odds are heavily in Australia's
favour.
Unlike the West Indies who are desperately in need of a pair of
opening batsmen, a number six, with Dinanath Ramnarine on the injured
list, a spin bowler and based on the performances of Nixon McLean and
Mervyn Dillon in South Africa, with Franklyn Rose also on the injured
list, probably a fast bowler or two to support the aging warriors
Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh, Australia hardly have a problem.
Like the West Indies in their glory days, Australia are bursting with
talent and ready to go.
So blessed are Australia at this time that apart from allrounder
Michael Bevan whose left-arm spin bowling mesmerised the West Indies
batsmen in 1996-97, they can afford to leave batsmen like Darren
Lehmann and Adam Gilchrist at home and unless Lara, Carl Hooper and
Shivnarine Chanderpaul come good, they may not even miss pacer Damien
Fleming who is out because of injury.
Neither Lehmann nor Gilchrist, who scored 154 against World Cup
champions Sri Lanka in a one-day international a few days before the
team was selected, were considered good enough to replace Michael
Slater, Matthew Elliott, Mark Waugh, Justin Langer, Ricky Ponting or
Greg Blewett and Australia may not miss Fleming because in Glenn
McGrath and Jason Gillespie, Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill, they
possess two pacers and two legspinners of quality.
Cricket is a game of glorious uncertainties and as Steve Waugh said a
few days ago, the West Indies could be dangerous because of Ambrose
and Walsh, Lara and Hooper and because they are wounded.
After South Africa, however, there is hardly a West Indian fan who
would bet on a Windies revenge for 1995 and 1996-97 - at least not
this time and not even though they are in Lara's backyard.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)