Say a prayer for Lara (3 March 1999)
The game of cricket is full of surprises and, you never know, the West Indies could spring one and defeat Australia in the first Test which opens on Friday at Queen's Park Oval
03-Mar-1999
3 March 1999
Say a prayer for Lara
Tony Becca
The game of cricket is full of surprises and, you never know, the West
Indies could spring one and defeat Australia in the first Test which
opens on Friday at Queen's Park Oval.
Looking at the 15-man squad from which the team will be selected,
however, victory for the West Indies would be more than a surprise: it
would be more like a miracle.
With four players unavailable, including batsmen Carl Hooper and
Shivnarine Chanderpaul, fast bowler Franklyn Rose, and right-arm
legspinner Dinanath Ramnarine, the selectors, but for the size of the
squad, have done a good job and can do nothing more than hope and
pray, not only that the likes of Suruj Ragoonath and Dave Joseph, if
they are selected to the final XI, rise to the occasion, but also that
Brian Lara starts to fire.
As well as they have done, the selectors could be questioned on the
inclusion of the 35-year-old Phil Simmons and the absence of a spin
bowler.
In the case of Simmons, the selectors may argue that in the absence of
Hooper, with James Adams bowling only a few overs in the Busta Cup and
with the likelihood of only four bowlers, as usual, being included in
the team, they need a batsman who bowls.
Even then, the selection of Simmons is strange. He has not performed
beyond the ordinary in the Busta Cup, his Test average, after 26 Test
matches spread over 11 years, is 22.26, and he has taken only four
wickets at an average of 64.25.
In the case of the absent spin bowler, the selectors may remind that
Ramnarine is injured and then explain Rawl Lewis no longer spins the
ball, that none of the other leg-spinners are good enough, that
against the Aussies the preferred choice would be an offspinner, and
that there is none good enough around - no one who flights and the
spins the ball enough to worry quality batsmen.
The Windies' problem as they prepare for the first Test is not so much
the presence of a batsman who can bowl or that of a spin bowler. The
problem is their batting.
While a fit Rose and Ramnarine would have made it stronger, the attack
is not seriously affected by their absence - not nearly as seriously
as the batting will be in the absence of Hooper and Chanderpaul.
In Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh - if they are fit enough to last,
Mervyn Dillon and Reon King, or preferably left-hander Pedro Collins
who swings the ball, the West Indies attack is almost as good as it
could have been. Without Hooper, despite his inconsistency, and
Chanderpaul, however, the batting is weak and could be easy pickings
for an Aussie attack spearheaded by fast bowler Glenn McGrath and
legspinners Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill.
From the list of eight batsmen, the six likely to be in the XI are
opening batsmen Sherwin Campbell and Ragoonath, Lara, Roland Holder,
Adams and Dave Joseph, and not even the most ardent fan would consider
that a strong West Indies line-up. In fact, up to a decade ago, half
of them would not even have been considered.
Now more than any other time, the West Indies need Lara at his best.
This is a golden opportunity for him to show his mettle - to lead from
the front, to do what George Headley used to do years ago when he
carried the West Indies on his shoulders and to prove that apart from
boasting the world record individual score, he is the best among
contemporary batsmen.
If he does not, the Test match, depending on which team bats first and
regardless of his ability to motivate the players, could be over in a
few days even though Lara and company have the Aussies where they said
they wanted them - on West Indian turf.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)