A tale of missed opportunities
Partab Ramchand - 22 May 2002
By the time the Indian team went to the Caribbean islands next in
1997, the decline of West Indian cricket was clearly marked. The
awesome squad under Clive Lloyd and Vivian Richards had finally
broken up and the replacement players proved to be nowhere near
as good.
Clear indications of the decline were seen in the West Indies
being defeated at home by Australia in early 1995 their first
series loss anywhere for 15 years and 29 such contests. It was
also the first loss in a home series for the West Indies since
1973 when Ian Chappell's Australians defeated them. Further proof
of the falling standards came when they were held to a 2-2 result
in a six-Test series in the summer of 1995 in England, a team
whom they had meticulously thrashed time and again during their
long reign at the top.
Naturally then it was with some hope that India approached the
series, notwithstanding their own deplorable record abroad,
particularly in the Caribbean. True, they went to the West Indies
following a 2-0 loss in a three-Test series in South Africa. But
given the disparity in strengths between South Africa and the
West Indies, it was reckoned that the Indians had a chance in
both the five-match Test series and the four one-day
internationals.
When the tour ended in early May, India had lost the Test series
1-0 and the one-day series 3-1. It was a rather disappointing
result given the fact that this West Indies side was probably the
weakest India had played against in the Caribbean. What was even
more shocking was the manner in which India went down in the only
Test that ended decisively.
The debacle at Bridgetown is recalled with dismay even today and
will undoubtedly be spoken of for many years to come. It was a
disaster of the highest order, one that is ranked with other such
horrendous setbacks that Indian cricket had suffered earlier. The
visitors were set a target of only 120 to win the third Test and
yet they collapsed unaccountably for 81. As it happened, it was
the only result of the rubber, and so a little bit of
application, determination and concentration could well have seen
India win their second series in the West Indies.
The knives were out and heads were shaken in disbelief. "I can't
believe it," was skipper Sachin Tendulkar's reaction echoing the
view of almost everyone else. " When will we get another chance
like this," asked the shattered captain, more in anguish than in
anger. If ever a victory chance was squandered away, it was this.
"I don't know what to say about a team which can't even score
120 runs," said coach Madan Lal, disappointed and furious at the
same time.
© CricInfo |
The enormity of the Bridgetown debacle was such that it
overshadowed everything else in the series. Actually, apart from
this one shocking collapse three hours of madness as it was
called the Indians did not fare all that badly. They matched the
West Indies in the first two Tests and more than held their own
in the fourth and fifth games of the series which were affected
by rain. Still, the tour did represent a tale of missed
opportunities from the Indian viewpoint, especially considering
the mediocre opposition. Shivnarine Chanderpaul proved to be a
veritable thorn in the flesh and never surrendered his wicket
cheaply. He was the logical choice for man of the series. Brian
Lara lived up to his reputation, as did Carl Hooper. But the rest
of the batting proved to be suspect and it was a pity that the
Indian bowlers could not strike consistently.
In this, they were a bit handicapped by the fact that Javagal
Srinath was not available for the Tests. The Indian pace
spearhead made it to the West Indies but almost at once pulled
out as it was discovered that an injured shoulder required
immediate treatment. Under the circumstances, Venkatesh Prasad
and Abey Kuruvilla were made to toil hard and it must be said
that they performed gallantly, particularly the latter, who
justified his surprise selection. A lot of course depended on the
spinners and both Anil Kumble and Sunil Joshi lived up to
expectations.
© CricInfo |
If the bowlers did reasonably well, given their limitations, the
batting could have been better, given its reputation. Rahul
Dravid, however, was one batsman who certainly enhanced his
reputation. In heading the Test averages at 72.00, Dravid
confirmed his growing status in the side and the manner in which
he handled the pace quintet of Courtney Walsh, Curtley Ambrose,
Ian Bishop, Franklyn Rose and Merv Dillon was an object lesson in
technique and temperament.
Tendulkar did not allow the cares of captaincy to interfere with
his batting as the final figures of 289 runs from six innings at
an average of 57.80 would illustrate. The experienced Navjot
Sidhu had one moment of glory, his monumental 201 in the second
Test at Port of Spain for which he batted some 12 hours.
The remaining batting, however, was patchy. Venkatsai Laxman,
used as an opening batsman could have been more consistent. And
the poor form shown by both Sourav Ganguly and Mohammad
Azharuddin was quite inexplicable. The left-hander made just 78
runs at an average of 19.50 while the former captain fared even
worse, garnering only 63 runs at an average of 12.60. In the
ultimate analysis, it was the batting that was the major letdown,
symbolized by what happened at Bridgetown.
[Archive]
© CricInfo