Testing time: Lara up for appraisal after second match: (23 February 1999)
Brian Lara, the most controversial, celebrated and pampered of contemporary cricketers, was last night put on probation as West Indies Test captain
23-Feb-1999
23 February 1999
Testing time: Lara up for appraisal after second match:
Tony Cozier
Brian Lara, the most controversial, celebrated and pampered of
contemporary cricketers, was last night put on probation as West
Indies Test captain.
He was grudgingly and conditionally retained for the first half
of the forthcoming home series against Australia.
Although berating Lara, manager Clive Lloyd and coach Malcolm
Marshall for their part in the humiliating thrashing in the
recent series in South Africa, West Indies Cricket Board (WICB)
president Pat Rousseau announced that they would be retained for
the first two of the four Tests, after which their status would
be reviewed.
He said the WICB, at an eagerly anticipated all-day meeting in
Antigua yesterday, had accepted its selection panel's
recommendation to limit Lara's tenure in the series.
But he made it plain that Lara had been read the riot act.
"We have told Mr. Lara that he needs to make significant
improvements in his leadership skills," Rosseau said at a Press
conference, beamed live on radio and television across the
Caribbean.
"To this end he will be given specific performance targets by
the chairman of selectors related to improvement in his
relationship with his players, discipline and with an emphasis
on punctuality, interaction with the coach and manager and
nurturing and development of his team members.
"At the end of the second Test, the selectors will assess Mr.
Lara's perfomances as captain against the targets set and decide
on the appointment of the captain for the next two Tests," he
said.
Rousseau said WICB investigations, including separate meetings
between a special sub-committee and the selectors with Lara,
Lloyd and Marshall, "pointed clearly to weakness in leadership
that contributed to poor performance of the team" in South
Africa.
He pointed out that Lara himself had reported difficulties in
achieving unity among the players and that "problems were also
evident" at the level of manager Lloyd and coach Marshall.
The left-handed Lara's turbulent career has been marked by high
achievement, a recent distinct decline and repeated run-ins with
the Board.
His world record Test and first-class scores, made in the space
of six weeks between April and June, elevated him to an
international reputation few cricketers have ever known.
The resulting fame and fortune turned his life upside down and
he has never been the same player - or the same man - since.
His Test average has slipped from over 60 to just under 50 and
he has not scored a hundred for 13 Tests. He averaged 31 in the
five Tests in South Africa.
His disciplinary record is longer than any other West Indian in
the past four years.
He was fined 10 per cent of his tour fee for temporarily
abandoning the team on the 1995 tour of England, reprimanded and
warned for derogatory comments made against team management
during the 1996 World Cup and fined for reporting late prior to
the first Test against Sri Lanka in 1997.
Recognising his potential as captain, the selectors first put
forward Lara as captain prior to the 1997 tour of Pakistan. But
the WICB baulked, rejected the recommendation and retained the
incumbent Courtney Walsh.
He was finally installed prior to the England home series last
year, following the West Indies 3-0 drubbing in the Tests in
Pakistan under Walsh.
A double triumph over England - 3-1 in the Tests and 4-1 in the
One-Day internationals - represented a rousing start to the
captaincy but the South African debacle revealed weaknesses in
his leadership that were identified by Rousseau last night.
The convoluted methods of WICB discipline, so obvious in its
past dealings with Lara and others, were again evident last
night.
Rousseau revealed that fast bowler Franklyn Rose and batsman
Stuart Williams had been reported for disciplinary action
following the South African tour.
Yet, a few miles away from where they were meeting at the Rex
Halcyon Hotel, Williams was captain of the Board XI playing
against the Australians in the opening match of their tour at
the Antigua Recreation Ground.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)