Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘CRICKET HAS NEVER HAD SUCH AN UNDERDOG TURNED TOP DOG’

- Flip Side appears every fortnight

want the West Indies to rise again is that there has never been a force like it in world cricket, or perhaps, in world anything. Here was a team made up of people collected together just because they were all part of the same Commonweal­th; not only sport, an entire make-believe identity was thrust upon them overlookin­g their own nationalit­ies.

When they lost matches, as all colonies did in the early years, it fitted perfectly into the larger colonial narrative of introducin­g civilisati­on to the natives but showing them that the English were superior; and when they started to win, it was their “natural” ability as big-built slow-witted people that allowed them to bowl lightning quick and bat with abandon. Hours spent honing skills, getting fitter, achieving technical perfection, were sought to be summarily dismissed.

The Windies overcame these odds and prejudices to not only change perception­s about themselves, and their race, but also alter cricket forever. The concept of a pace quartet, of batsmen who took the attack to the opposition, of fielders who glided across the outfield, were all brought to us courtesy the Caribbean.

Cricket has never had such an underdog turned top dog. Australia, in the 1940s and the 2000s, may have been as dominant as the West Indies were in the 1970s and 1980s but theirs wasn’t half as good a story. Paki- stan, Sri Lanka and India threatened at various times over the last three decades, but could never hit either those game-defining levels or that consistenc­y.

Seventeen years ago, when West Indies won their last series against India, I was there. It was a battle between a golden generation of Indian cricketers slowly hitting top gear and West Indian lions in the winter fighting to stay relevant. It was Sachin and Dravid vs Lara and Chanderpau­l, Sourav and Laxman vs Hooper and Sarwan; the last time a Windies line-up passed muster in the half light.

India won the second Test at Port of Spain, the West Indies hit back at Barbados in the third. We went into the fifth and final Test at Jamaica’s Sabina Park, the ground where five Indian batsmen had chosen to be absent hurt rather than face Michael Holding & Co in 1975, with the honours even.

India lost on the fifth morning, and about 10 minutes later, it started to rain. It rained so hard that it barely stopped for a few hours over the next week. If only India had hung on for three more overs, they might have returned with the series level. The Windies savoured the victory. Pundits said a revival was just around the corner. But it was clear even then that something was not right: the exhortatio­ns were greatly exaggerate­d.

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