Right time for Academy
They launch the first cricket academy in the West Indies at St George's University in Grenada tomorrow and not a moment too soon
Tony Cozier
28-Jan-2001
They launch the first cricket academy in the West Indies at St
George's University in Grenada tomorrow and not a moment too soon.
It can't instantly change the vinegar that West Indies cricket has
become back into the vintage wine it once was. But what it will do is
take 24 of the most promising players and start preparing them
properly for the demands of the international game that seem beyond
the capacity of the present generation.
The programme, modelled in large measure on the Australian prototype,
will concentrate on more than just the participants' cricketing
skills.
Techniques obviously need to be honed, for such deficiencies in every
area of the game have been starkly exposed on grounds in every corner
of the globe of late. But one of the most critical items on the
programme will deal with the importance of fitness, both physical and
mental.
Wide gap
Nothing has been more glaring in recent times than the gap between
West Indian teams and those opponents who have paid special attention
to these areas, as the West Indies once did under the strict command
of the tough little Australian, Dennis Waight.
To compare this team in the field with the athletic, superfit dazzlers
under Clive Lloyd is to understand the negligence that has led to the
rapid fall of West Indies cricket.
To see the middle-age spread carried by several players in the Busta
Cup - not least at Kensington over the past couple of days - is to
appreciate the slackness that has been allowed to go unchecked.
When Ramnaresh Sarwan returned from his short stint at the Australian
Academy last October, he spoke primarily of the levels of fitness that
were demanded.
Fitness the key
The St George's Academy will necessarily follow suit. John Buchanan,
the current Australian coach, has said that there is no place any more
for an unfit player in his team.
"In today's world, particularly in the One-Day game, it is very, very
difficult for a person with limited physical skills to succeed and
gradually that's becoming the case in the five-day arena as well," is
the way he puts it.
"Obviously, the so-called modern cricketer has got to have reasonable
cardiovascular and anaerobic fitness," he added.
"Aside from the technical skills of batting, bowling, fielding and
tactics, there's also stuff like agility, flexibility, speed, power,
ingredients that get guys running as fast as they possibly can between
the wickets and in the field."
They are opinions that, judging by their aimless training and practice
routines, do not seem to be shared by the present West Indies team.
Perhaps they will be by their successors.
Once the chosen 24 finish their 12-week course at St George's, they
will have been put through a thorough fitness programe, been
biomechanically assessed and been told all about nutrition and diet.
What's next?
The problem is what happens next.
The WICB has to ensure that they don't simply return home, rejoin
their club teams and comfortably slip back into the general apathy.
Otherwise, the whole exercise would have been a waste of time and
money.
It needs to appoint monitors in each of the territory to oversee the
continuing development of the academy graduates.
Ideally, it would place them on contracts, converting them into
professional cricketers from an early age and making them appreciate
what that means.
It can't allow the mediocrity that has characterised West Indies
cricket for too long to continue. It can do worse than start with the
discipline of fitness.