Windies confident (3 May 1999)
Amidst the glamour, style and excitement associated with Caribbean cricket, Brian Lara and his buoyant West Indies team headed for the World Cup last night
03-May-1999
3 May 1999
Windies confident
Haydn Gill
Amidst the glamour, style and excitement associated with
Caribbean cricket, Brian Lara and his buoyant West Indies team
headed for the World Cup last night.
They left hoping to rewind the clock and vowing to put behind
them the sudden retirement of Carl Hooper.
After a grand send-off in which John King provided the major
entertainment and in which Lara was feted on his 30th birthday,
the West Indies captain spoke of the optimism that was running
through the team.
"I think the guys are very confident and we all hope that
history can repeat itself," he said in reference to the fact
that West Indies have reached the final every time England
hosted the tournament.
"We're looking forward to playing in the World Cup, and, as I
said, we are quietly very confident."
Hundreds of excited supporters converged on the Grantley Adams
International Airport for a farewell party hosted by new team
sponsors Carib.
No one, including Lara, would let the stunning retirement of
Hooper dampen the occasion, which was highlighted by Alison
Hinds' rendition of Happy Birthday to the champion Trinidadian
left-hander.
"Carl has made a decision and it's a decision only he himself
can make," Lara told reporters in the Club Caribbean Lounge.
"He knows exactly what is happening. He thinks it is time and
we've got to all respect that.
"The World Cup is of utmost importance. We've got to forget
whatever handicap we have with the absence of Carl."
Lara, a close friend of Hooper, admitted that the West Indies
had played good cricket with the Guyanese all-rounder and had
also performed exceptionally in his absence.
"I have to respect his decision. Carl is a good friend of mine.
Everyone knows what an international sportsman goes through,"
Lara said.
"He is not going to make a decision like that unless he is
pretty clear that it is going to be the right decision for
himself."
Like so many others, Lara believes the World Cup will be highly
competitive, especially in light of the English climatic
conditions which usually favour bowlers at this time of the
year.
He believes each team has a chance, including minnows like
Bangladesh, Scotland and Kenya, who stunned the globe with their
amazing win against the West Indies in the last World Cup.
"The World Cup in May and June is going to offer all teams the
chance of playing good cricket," Lara said.
"You get in there on a damp day against Bangladesh or any team
and you can struggle.
"There is no one team that I'll pinpoint. What I'll hope is that
we can play well as a team, assess the conditions as quickly as
possible, play the role that each one has to play and take each
opposition as the toughest one."
West Indies, who have been placed in Group 2 with Australia,
Pakistan, New Zealand, Bangladesh and Scotland, open their
campaign against Pakistan on May 16 in Bristol.
Ahead of their opening match, they will play three warm-up
games, the first of which is scheduled for Saturday.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)