West Indies cricket going the way of the Titanic

EIGHTEEN years on, the West Indies’ thrashing by Australia in the first Test in Hobart last weekend bears uncanny similarities to their predecessors’ routs in all three Tests in Pakistan in November and December 1997.

It is a case of the more things change, the more they remain the same in West Indies cricket.

Even several of the West Indies’ main characters from the Pakistani whitewash are still involved. Clive Lloyd, then manager, is now chief selector. Courtney Walsh, the captain, is selector on tour in Australia. Curtly Ambrose, Walsh’s fearsome partner in pace, is the team’s bowling consultant. Head coach Phil Simmons batted in the middle order in Pakistan, Stuart Williams opened. They were in Hobart as head coach and his assistant.

20111211tonycozierGrenada prime minister Keith Mitchell remains in the thick of things. After Pakistan, he was concerned enough to press Caricom governments to discuss the state of West Indies cricket. He now heads the Caricom sub-committee on cricket and is the prime mover behind the recent damming Barriteau report on the governance of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB).

The teams in Pakistan and Australia both went into their assignments unsettled by off-field upheavals. The issue prior to Pakistan was the captaincy; it was never far below the surface. The problems leading into Australia was the confusion over the suspension and subsequent reinstatement of head coach Simmons, a matter initially triggered by the contentious omission of the ever-dependable Shivnarine Chanderpaul from the two Tests against Australia in the Caribbean in June.

The media attention on the high profile West Indians simultaneously in Australia for the Big Bash T20 tournament has been a further distraction, a constant reminder of the lingering rift between the players and the WICB.

Counterbalancing the parallels are obvious differences.

Two years after Australia ended 15 years of West Indies invincibility with a 2-1 coup in the Caribbean, Pakistan delivered the first inkling of the dramatic meltdown to follow. In spite of the presence of Brian Lara, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Carl Hooper, Ambrose and Walsh, all established among the game’s foremost players,