Off-field problems
The West Indies team badly beaten in the first Test in New Zealand on Monday is stronger than it was when it held Australia to a drawn series at home last season, Dr
Tony Cozier
22-Dec-1999
The West Indies team badly beaten in the first Test in New Zealand on
Monday is stronger than it was when it held Australia to a drawn series at
home last season, Dr. Rudi Webster asserted yesterday.
But he says it is being adversely affected by off-the-field problems.
'There are other factors apart from ability that determine how well you
perform,' the sports psychologist said from his home in Grenada yesterday.
'We need to be a bit more analytical and a bit less critical. We have to
ask why did the team perform so well against Australia and the same team
is performing so poorly now''
Webster was official 'performance consultant' when the West Indies came
out of the slump of a 5-0 drubbing in South Africa and a heavy first Test
loss to share the series with the powerful Australians 2-2.
'I think this team is better except for the absence of Curtly Ambrose,' he
said.
'We were without Shivnarine Chanderpaul for the whole series and Carl
Hooper for the first two Tests and had three players who weren't ready for
cricket at this level.'
As was the case against Australia, the West Indies need to go back to the
basics of batting, bowling, fielding and captaincy, he said.
'I was confident that if we did that against the Australians, we would
become more competitive and that if we could put pressure on them, we
would have a chance of beating them,' he noted.
'If we can be competitive against New Zealand I think we'll beat them
because they are not as good a team as Australia,' he added.
Webster pointed out that the averages of the main West Indies batsmen -
captain Lara (51), Jimmy Adams (47), Chanderpaul (40) and Sherwin Campbell
(37) - were better than all the New Zealanders except Craig McMillan (43)
and even better than most South Africans in the 5-0 whitewash last season.
'Some people disregard statistics but statistics are a good benchmark of
the level of ability and the talent is obviously there,' Webster said.
Lack of counselling
He identified the lack of counselling for Chanderpaul following the trauma
of his accidental shooting of a policeman in Georgetown earlier this year,
the failure to recognise why Lara is underachieving and squabbling within
The Management as the main issues adversely affecting the team.
'Chanderpaul had an unfortunate incident a few months ago and I don't know
what has been done to help him,' Webster said.
With his experience of several years residence in Australia and New
Zealand, Webster claimed that, if something like that had happened there,
'someone from the executive would have got experts to counsel this young
man to try to refocus him on the job he has to do on the cricket field.
'Instead of that, we had a member of The Management team launching a
broadside attack on the same individual in the Press,' he noted, referring
to manager Clive Lloyd's open criticism of Chanderpaul for not playing
enough competitive cricket.
'Here is a guy who has been through a very serious incident, has probably
had no counselling and then gets attacked by The Management and we expect
him to go out and do well,' he said.
Webster remarked that Lara was playing so far below his potential that
'something must be basically wrong'.
'Here's a batsman who has the record Test score of 375, who is the only
batsman to score 500 in first-class cricket and virtually held Australia
to a draw by himself less than a year ago,' he said.
'To see him playing now, you would have to know something is drastically
wrong.
'I think we have to find out what it is and then address it,' he advised.
Webster was also concerned with the open discord within management.
'We have a member of The Management group attacking, in a very personal
way, the chairman of selectors,' he said in reference to manager Lloyd's
description of selection chief Mike Findlay as 'old and crotchety'.
'All these things can impact on the players,' he added.
'I'm not trying to make excuses but if the team behind the team is not
doing its job properly, then it's very difficult for the team on the field
to do theirs.'
Webster believed new coach Sir Vivian Richards, the former Test captain,
had a 'very difficult job' lifting his players for the remainder of the
series in New Zealand.
'If you go through a series of questions, you will find that the problems
they are having are all originating in their heads,' he said.
'They are not using their mental skills, like concentration properly and
their confidence has got to be down.'