January 11 1998
COZIER ON CRICKET: 'ACID' APPLIED TO LARA (Column)
by Tony Cozier
AMIDST all the words about the change in the West Indies
captaincy, more than even Brian Lara himself will ever score runs,
the line by the wiggly worm in Guy OÕNealÕs cartoon in the Weekend
Nation were the most pointed.
ÒWÕen de fanfare over ... de acid test does start,Ó the little
creature commented.
The fanfare is over and, while the Test hasnÕt started yet, the
acid certainly has.
If Lara, or anyone else, was in doubt as to the difficult state of
the wicket on which he will now have to at least metaphorically
bat, he need only have listened to the phone-in on Radio Jamaica
during FridayÕs rain interlude in the PresidentÕs Cup match.
While the Prince of Port-of-Spain was back home being feted on his
final accession to the throne of West Indies cricket, the mood of
those on the other end of the line into Sabina Park was utterly
unforgiving.
But that was only to be expected. If he is jeered, booed, heckled
and abused as he walks out to toss with Mike Atherton at Sabina
Park on the morning of January 29, he will not be the first West
Indies captain to receive such a reception.
Richie Richardson was similarly treated in his first appearance on
West Indian soil as skipper, against South Africa at the same
Sabina, and even icons like George Headley, Garry Sobers and Clive
Lloyd had their share at venues further south.
Thankfully, there are level-headed voices in Jamaica, such as the
respected sports editor of The Gleaner, Tony Becca, who have
sought to calm the turbulent waters that can only cause the
already listing ship of West Indies cricket to further founder.
If Courtney Walsh, a decent, wholehearted West Indian, can
overcome his disappointment and play under a man for whom most of
his fellow Jamaicans obviously have no time, it would be further
welcome oil on the choppy surface.
Yet the likelihood is that the voices on FridayÕs phone lines will
be multiplied a thousand times over and that the first test Lara
will have to face, in his first Test, is a test of his infamous
temperament.
He got a taste of it last October, also in Jamaica, during the Red
Stripe Bowl and, according to the Trinidad and Tobago Board, took
it pretty badly. It placed him under great psychological pressure
and forced him to take refuge in his room. Now there is nowhere to
hide and he must confront it head on.
The most emphatic way of doing so, of course, is to come out and
make a hundred, Ð or two, or three, or four, or five! Ð and to
continue doing so with the consistency that has deserted him over
the past two years.
For all his acknowledged strategic acumen, it is his batting that
will be more critical to his success as captain.
Like all the great players, batsmen especially, his is the example
that can inspire his players and deflate the opposition, quite
apart from quieting the detractors.
Wasim Akram has made the point that LaraÕs innate self-confidence
should rub off on the whole team. Bradman, Sobers, Ian Chappell,
Richards, Imran and Akram himself are just a few of the names that
spring readily to mind as having such an effect on the teams they
so effectively led.
It would obviously be simplistic to believe that even a
double-hundred at Sabina by the new captain would immediately turn
things round for LaraÕs image or for West Indies cricket.
HeÕs too complex a character and he problems are far too profound
for that. ItÕs still a very long way to shore but it would be an
encouraging way to start.
Big blunder
AS we wait in sincere hope for the leadership that will revive
West Indies cricket, the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB)
continues to confound and embarrass us with its instances of
ineptitude.
Its latest error has gone straight to No. 1 on the charts of
bloops, blunders and bloomers. How could it possibly have managed
to get things so wrong that it could send a team to South Africa
for the Youth World Cup with seven players over the age limit?
It is an issue that was raised as recently as the Under-15 World
Challenge in England in 1996 when any numbers of players from
India and Pakistan, the finalists, were shown to be over-age after
the event.
There have been discrepancies in previous Under-19 bilateral
series involving the West Indies. Surely, the first thing that had
to be ascertained in any such tournament, above all others, was
the date of qualification.
As ÒWoodyÓ Richard observed in his piece on VOB the other morning,
if the WICB happened to be an American organisation it would have
found itself facing several law suits from irate parents.
Instead, we are left to shake our heads again in depression and
disbelief.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)