Zimbabwe Cricket Online guest column
Former local cricket coach GEORGE GOODWIN has returned to Zimbabwe to follow the current Test series and one-day matches against South Africa and Sri Lanka
George Goodwin
17-Nov-1999
Former local cricket coach GEORGE GOODWIN has returned to
Zimbabwe to follow the current Test series and one-day matches
against South Africa and Sri Lanka. Still heavily involved in the
game in rural Western Australia, he talks about his 'first
impressions' at Harare Sports Club.
ZIMBABWE cricket needs a tonic and it must be administered now
before the "virus" that has gripped the national team takes a
stranglehold. From an impressive 1998 with promising
performances against powerhouse Pakistan, including an historic
first away series win on the sub-continent, to a Super Six spot
at the World Cup earlier this year the national team has been
dealt a body blow.
Blame unrest in the camp, blame a lackadaisical attitude by the
players and even blame the ZCU ....the toss.... the weather.....
Just blame everybody, anybody. That's not the answer, even
though many of the Zimbabwean people who paid to watch the second
Test debacle against South Africa were not slow in coming forward
with 'blame'.
Having witnessed some strong showings against the potent
Pakistani attack last year and followed the team's progress
through the media since, I feel that as a credentialled coach,
cricket-lover and ardent supporter of Zimbabwe cricket I am
entitled to comment.
Two things hit me like an Allan Donald bouncer on my return to
Zimbabwe after some 14 years of living in Australia. One I
ducked and came up smiling. That was the impressive sight of
Harare Sports Club Ground which I believe is now under the
jurisdiction of the Zimbabwe Cricket Union. The new stand, the
former rugby ground seating, the picturesque green oval and the
roomy new media centre were an impressive improvement in just one
year, not to mention "The Keg".
The other bouncer I was unable to duck fast enough, and it hurt.
It was the poor crowd against one of the best teams in the world,
the lack of corporate tents and the lack of support generally by
the people who did attend. A winning team draws the crowds.
Until just a month ago Zimbabwe was considered a successful team,
certainly Zimbabwe's most successful sporting team until it
crashed to the world champions.
The reason is simple. With its lack of depth, injuries to key
bowlers Heath Streak and Neil Johnson were critical, and so the
'virus' took hold. To take on the mighty Australians in a Test
match without having played a first-class fixture for nearly a
year was downright folly. And to follow that up with two Tests
against heavyweights South Africa, who were hell-bent on
preparing for the England tour, was just as bad.
A couple of strong first-class hit-outs for the players and not
the few one-day sorties they did have before the Australia visit
would have made the world of difference. Without their two
frontline bowlers the Zimbabwe attack is wafer-thin.
Unfortunately that spread to the batting line-up, and while that
is no excuse for the abject performance put up by the batsmen
against Australia and South Africa, I feel it would not need much
to give the team a lift.
Major surgery was suggested by the 'armchair critics' throughout
the South African Test disaster - "Houghton must go, Ellman-Brown
must go, Campbell must go, the ZCU must go...". To the Zimbabwe
public I say this: Your team has fought valiantly against great
odds. The ZCU likewise has fought valiantly against great odds.
Both have tasted great success until recent weeks, so why the
outcry when they lose a few? The paying public has the right to
be critical but is it right to 'put the boots in' while the
players are down? The tonic recommended is not a magic elixir -
just a little TLC - 'Tender Loving Care' - and support. They
will recover, but support is critical to their rehabili-tation.
One thing that was notable at the end of the second South African
Test -- the only one I have seen on my most recent trip -- was
the lack of contact, even eye contact, between the Zimbabwe
players and their fans. In Australia it is now fashion for any
team after a big game -- winner or loser -- to acknowledge the
support of the public. The Zimbabwe players were conspicuous by
their absence on the Sports Club balcony. Several people in my
vicinity at the aftermatch awards even asked for the players.
Surely a brief appearance on the balcony to thank those who did
bother to stay would not be too much.
That was one pimple to squeeze. Another was for the players to
make a concerted effort to attend the sponsors' tents or boxes to
thank them personally for their support -- especially the Ford
people and the like. My research shows not too much of this goes
on. And last but not least the players and the ZCU must bury any
hatchet that may be raised between them -- contracts or whatever
-- to become a united team.
A happy team is a winning team and at the minute there appears to
be an undercurrent of discontent in the camp which was reflected
in the team's play. It is not too late to meet half-way, bury the
hatchet and get on with entertaining the public the best way they
know how.