What West Indies cricket really needs (25 February 1999)
The West Indies Cricket Board is under fire from many quarters for its decision to retain Brian Lara as captain of the West Indies team initially for the first two Tests against Australia, and deservedly so
25-Feb-1999
25 February 1999
What West Indies cricket really needs
Tony Becca
The West Indies Cricket Board is under fire from many quarters for
its decision to retain Brian Lara as captain of the West Indies team
initially for the first two Tests against Australia, and deservedly
so.
As far as cricket fans around the region and others close to the game
are concerned, the tour of South Africa was a disaster and apart from
his own disappointing performance, the captain contributed to the low
morale of the players and should have been replaced.
The selectors, however, recommended he be retained, the board
accepted the recommendation and the fans are hopping mad.
Based on the outbursts of the fans, the board, which has the power to
accept or reject the selectors' recommendation as to who should be
the captain, has let down West Indies cricket - especially as it
seems to agree that Lara did a poor job.
The board's investigations involved looking at the reports from the
captain, the manager, the coach and the physiotherapist, meetings
which involved the board president, the board's chief executive
officer, the chairman of the cricket committee, the chairman of the
selection committee, the captain, the manager and the coach, and at
the end of what president Pat Rousseau said were efforts to get the
facts and to guide the deliberations of the board fairly, the captain
was found guilty of weak leadership.
In announcing the board's decision in Antigua on Monday, Rousseau
said Lara would be given specific performance targets related to
improvement in his relationship with his players, discipline,
interaction with the coach and manager and nurturing and development
of his team members.
Those, among other things, were what Lara was guilty of in South
Africa, and by retaining him, the board has once again demonstrated
its own weakness and its inability to lead West Indies cricket - the
same weakness and the same inability to act which will see the
manager and the coach retained despite, as the president himself
pointed out, their own weakness as members of The Management team.
In their defence, and remembering that the president explained Lara's
re-appointment as a cricketing decision, the board and the selectors
will probably argue that they have a responsibility to protect the
image of West Indies cricket, that they need to put up a good show
against Australia, that after looking around there was no suitable
candidate for the captaincy, that on top of that they wanted their
number one batsman in a good frame of mind, and therefore, they had
no choice but to stick with Lara.
As it is with the explanation that manager Clive Lloyd and coach
Malcolm Marshall have to be retained until their contracts expire
later this year, that, however, does not wash. There is more to the
image of West Indies cricket than winning or losing.
The image of West Indies cricket was tarnished before and during the
series in South Africa, Lara was the main cause and a good decision,
cricketing, political or whatever, would have been to select a new
captain.
West Indies cricket is hurting, the fans are disappointed, and the
board knows it - that is why Rousseau ended his presentation in
Antigua with these words: "We invite and urge you to give your full
support to the captain, management and members of the West Indies
team and come out in large numbers to the Tests and one-day games.
West Indies cricket needs you!"
What West Indies cricket needs is a board which respects the feeling
of the people and which will not pamper prima donnas.
The West Indies board under Rousseau has been moving to put in the
kind of infrastructure which will serve the development of West
Indies cricket in the future, and although the call is out, it would
be wrong to ask the board to quit. Those, however, who supported or
voted for the retention of Lara as captain has compromised West
Indies cricket and should go their way.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)