Richards to the test
Sir Viv Richards has had a traumatic introduction to the realities of contemporary West Indies cricket nearly a decade after he was its very embodiment as captain and the most intimidating batsman of his time
Tony Cozier
02-Jan-2000
Sir Viv Richards has had a traumatic introduction to the
realities of contemporary West Indies cricket nearly a decade
after he was its very embodiment as captain and the most
intimidating batsman of his time.
Briefly pitchforked into the post of team coach after Malcolm
Marshall was stricken down with his terminal illness during the
World Cup, Richards was only around long enough to preside over
defeat by Australia and elimination at the first round.
But he had seen enough to convince him that some of the players
dont quite realise what cricket means to the Caribbean and
to state that, if he had his way, half would go.
Some did go before he was recalled by the West Indies Cricket
Board (WICB) to be coach on the current tour of New Zealand
where the results have, if anything, been even more
disheartening.
We did not have to guess at his inner feelings as he witnessed
the team deteriorate from the actual and psychological
ascendancy of a first day total of 282 for one in a two-Test
series to the ignominy of successive defeats by nine wickets
and an innings and 105 runs.
The fleeting images of him on the television coverage carried
that cold-blooded expression that once turned opposing bowlers
and slack team-mates into jelly.
From this distance, it is impossible to tell what effect they
have had in New Zealand but, even in his mellowing years,
Richards is not one to put up with foolishness.
He has had to contend with some shocking, unintelligent
all-round cricket and endure his team being outplayed in every
department of the game and tactily out thought.
Most degrading of all, he has been part of a West Indies Test
side virtually cowed into submission by competent but hardly
overpowering opponents.
He has seen batsmen run themselves out like suicidal lemmings
at critical moments, one off a no-ball.
He has asked his fast bowlers to bowl a fuller length and more
direct line.
Even the opposing captain, Stephen Fleming, openly stated the
obvious, that they were bowling too short, but only towards the
end of New Zealands massive innings in the second Test did
they conform to the advice, with the expected results.
Richards has heard his players complain like tell-tale
schoolboys about sledging by a run-of-the-mill fast-medium
bowler whose verbosity would have been answered with a volley
of silencing strokes from proud West Indians of an earlier
generation.
That was how Ricardo Powell, a 20-year-old with the old-time
aggression that is lacking in this team, dealt with the
abrasive Dion Nash in his debut Test only to be immediately
discarded.
It is hard to believe that Viv Richards, the Master Blaster
himself, was party to that decision.
He has witnessed history being made through a double-century by
Matthew Sinclair, an undoubtedly promising young batsman, but
one with a discernible weakness against bodyline bowling that
no one seemed to pick up until he had passed 150.
A New Zealand newspaper reported after Sinclairs feat that an
English journalist who had been touring with the England A
team had discovered after Sinclair scored 182 against them that
bowling straight and into his legs closed down many of his
options.
The captain of that England A team was Mark Alleyne, a
Barbadian and team-mate of Courtney Walsh at the English
county, Gloucestershire.
Did no one seek him out for a little inside information
Not everything has been gloom and doom, for Adrian Griffith, a
batsman with obvious limitations, has shown what can be
achieved by application and determination and Reon King who,
after all, has had only three Test matches looks the business
as a fast bowler, if not as a fielder or batsman.
Richards is new to the position and still learning by bitter
experience. As he has said, and is obvious, he needs time to
make his mark.
It was incongruous, therefore, if typical of the way the WICB
does things, for an advertisement inviting applications for
his job to be placed in the regional press in the midst of
Richards stint in New Zealand, especially as it is known he
cannot meet the qualifications.
The job calls for, among other things, an advanced coaching
certificate and certification or training in sports
psychology. Richards has neither, which the WICB would have
known when it set out its terms of reference and when it
appointed him for New Zealand.
So it has again opened itself to controversy and embarrassment.
To overlook other applicants with the requisite qualifications
and reappoint Richards would be to nullify its own credibility,
such as it is.
To summarily discard him after seeking him out and appointing
him only two months earlier would be equally wrong.
As one of the West Indies greatest cricketers, he deserves
better than that.
It leaves the WICB having to come to a compromise, perhaps
creating a new, unadvertised post for Richards to remain within
the team management for the string of difficult engagements
that lie ahead while employing the best qualified coach.
Why Richards should want to be re-engaged, given everything he
has so far experienced, is a mystery. But he was never one to
shirk from a challenge.