Hindustan Times (Patiala)

When West Indies legends left Brian Lara embarrasse­d

- HT Correspond­ent sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com n

: West Indies were the side to beat in the 1980s and even in the early 90s. Their dominance left other teams stunned.

However, not all of the reputation was attained in the right spirit, claimed Brian Lara, one of the greatest batsmen ever.

While delivering the 2017 MCC Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture on Monday, Lara said he felt there were occasions when the tactics West Indies employed resulted in “playing the game in a way it should never, ever be played”.

Lara cited the New Zealand series in 1980. “I grew up at a time when West Indies dominated the world. For 15 years from 1980, the West Indies never lost a Test series. And just before that, Colin Croft decided he was going to take a piece out of Fred Goodall’s shoulder and ran into him during a Test Match. Michael Holding decided he was no longer a cricketer, he was a footballer and he kicked a stump. I’m sure the occurrence­s during that period had a big effect on cricket,” Lara said.

‘EMBARRASSE­D’

Lara confessed he was “embarrasse­d” when a series of umpiring decisions helped the West Indies lord England in 1988.

“Everyone said England had no chance. But they won in Jamaica and, in Trinidad, even after rain, had time to chase down a small total,” Lara said.

“They (groundsmen) moved lethargic, slow. They took their time to ensure this game was not going to start any time soon. Eventually, it started with a couple of hours to go and England still had time. We bowled, in one hour, seven overs. It was dark and Graham Gooch had to call his troops from the field and the West Indies grabbed a draw.”

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