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The
hosts need a win like never before
Unseasoned professionals
Fazeer Mohammed
April 10, 2007
Hope for
the best, but brace for the worst. That's all you can really do as a West
Indies cricket fan these days.
Expectations? What, a miraculous revival or just another pathetic
performance? Don't even bother to agonise. The most that can be expected
right now is that Brian Lara will lead his team on the field against South
Africa in Grenada, a match the home side must win to retain any hope of
reaching the semi-finals of the ICC's World Cup. Anything else is just plain
guesswork. To say they have to improve significantly-in application,
attitude, intensity and technique-from the showings in the three previous
matches against Australia, New Zealand and Sri Lanka hardly qualifies as a
startling revelation. There really is nothing new that can be said about the
Caribbean side, because everyone with even a cursory interest in West Indies
cricket has passed this way many times before in the last few years: a
must-win situation after a series of sub-standard performances, accompanied
by the eternal hope that one spark of genius can somehow turn the whole
thing around.
None of the
comments from any of the prominent personalities ahead of this encounter at
the redeveloped Queen's Park Stadium offer any enlightening insights, except
to reinforce the damning reality that it has taken a pretty long time, in
sporting terms, for the senior regional team to have gone exactly nowhere.
Yes, they
have traversed the globe many times over and there have been the occasional
moments deserving of real celebration, but when our most successful captain
ever, in the midst of a first-ever World Cup in the Caribbean, speaks about
players needing to understand the importance of representing the region, you
just want to throw your arms up in frustration and disbelief that a grand
legacy has been reduced to this.
Again, such
remarks are not exactly groundbreaking, for many other well-placed
individuals have lamented the apparent lack of pride at different stages of
this painfully long downward spiral of a West Indian entity that was for so
long looked upon with admiration, fear and envy all at the same time by
opponents both great and small throughout the cricketing world.
It's just
that when the latest similar utterance comes from a man who spoke hopefully
about the players' willingness to listen and learn less than six months ago,
only then do you really wonder if we will ever emerge from this bottomless
pit.
Clive Lloyd
seemed full of hope and expectation during the Champions Trophy last
October, when his impromptu role as team advisor appeared to be bearing
fruit as West Indies reached the final before surrendering the title meekly
to Australia in Mumbai. Now, in the full-fledged role of team coordinator,
his statements last week were loaded with the contradictions that could be a
reflection of the confused state of the team on the field, at least in their
three Super Eights matches so far.
"We must
impress upon them the importance of playing for the West Indies, wearing
this badge that I have here with pride," Lloyd was reported as saying. "They
are seasoned professionals but we are trying to get a work ethic with some
youngsters and I hope that they understand after this World Cup what it
means to the people of the West Indies."
Seasoned
professionals needing to appreciate what it means to represent the region?
That sounds like a contradiction in terms, for the description "seasoned
professionals" implies not only a wealth of experience and a high level of
application, discipline and consistency in their particular endeavour, but
also an awareness of the circumstances and conditions in which they ply
their trade.
He or she
may not be able to rise to the occasion every time, but the true
professional, at the very least, is aware of the significance of an event,
which is why the big names are invariably the ones regularly at the top in
all the high-profile competitions of the sporting world. It may not seem
like much on the surface, but a failure to comprehend the context of a
particular contest could mean that the battle is almost lost already.
What Lloyd
is saying, although not in so many words, is that most of those players who
currently wear West Indian colours really have no idea what they are doing.
It is just another day's work for just another day's pay. Blistering hundred
or first-ball duck, five-wicket haul or none-for-plenty, it really doesn't
matter all that much. Producing a match-winning performance in a critical
situation is merely a happy coincidence.
Every West
Indian fan is hoping against hope that tomorrow will be one of those days
when there is a sterling effort to match the significance of the team's
World Cup prospects, bearing in mind that the same South Africans were
hammered in the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy not so long ago.
But if
victory does come our way to break the streak of embarrassing defeats, will
it carry any significance as a guide to expectations in the immediate
future? On the evidence of the last few days, last few months and last
several years, the short answer is no.
At this
stage, though, we'll take whatever we can get, even if it is only to elevate
expectations so that they can fall from a greater height next time.
©
Trinidad & Tobago Express
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