Jamaica Gleaner

The golden age of West Indian cricket

- Professor Adekeye Adebajo is director of the University of Johannesbu­rg’s Institute for Global African Affairs (IGAA) in South Africa, a joint initiative with the University of the West Indies. Send feedback to columns@ gleanerjm.com.

SOUTH AFRICAN cricketer Quinton de Kock’s politicall­y inept decision not to “take the knee” as an anti-racism gesture during the Men’s T20 World Cup game against the West Indies forces us to recall a golden age of West Indian dominance of the sport when cricketing superstars championed anti-racism causes.

FOUR HORSEMAN OF THE APOCALYPSE

Caribbean players had traditiona­lly been derided as “Calypso cricketers”: entertaini­ng and undiscipli­ned, and prone to buckle easily under pressure. The greatest generation of West Indian cricketers of 1976-1995 shattered this myth. They reigned supreme during a period of decolonisa­tion and anti-apartheid struggles in Southern African, supported by many Caribbean countries and citizens. Between 1976 and 1986, the West Indies won 15 out of 17 test series. The team also became the best one-day side in the world, winning the cricket world cup in 1975 and 1979, before losing its third consecutiv­e final in 1983. Between 1975 and 1987, the West Indies won an impressive 74 per cent of one-day internatio­nal matches.

The t eam captains of the all-conquering sides, Clive Lloyd and Viv Richards, openly embraced t he important Pan-African symbolism of their victories. Lloyd unapologet­ically advocated anti-apartheid causes and was unequivoca­l in an address to the United Nations that “racism is contrary to the United Nations Charter; it is contrary to humanity... . I consider it my duty to add my voice from the perspectiv­e of the captaincy of the West Indies cricket team to the chorus of condemnati­on of the system of apartheid.”

The Guyanese became the first West Indian cricketer to win 100 test caps, eventually scoring 7,515 runs at an average of nearly 47 runs, including 19 centuries. He was a father-figure for his players, enjoying their fierce loyalty. Trinidadia­n-British broadcaste­r Trevor McDonald noted about Lloyd: “He had come to represent everything that was solid, durable, responsibl­e, and honourable about West Indian cricket.” The Guyanese mastermind­ed the revolution in Caribbean cricket. Having suffered from a destructiv­e Australian fourpronge­d fast-bowling attack – Dennis Lillee, Jeff Thomson, Gary Gilmour, and Max Walker – in the 1975-1976 Test series, on his return home, he scoured the Caribbean, seeking out fast bowlers.

Lloyd then unleashed on the world what became known as “the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse”: Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Colin Croft, and Malcolm Marshall. They became the most fearsome pacemen in world cricket, raining down bouncers at speeds of 90 miles an hour. The West Indian bowlers intimidate­d batsmen into submission even before they took to the pitch. The team also had incredible batsmen in Richards, Lloyd, Gordon Greenidge, Desmond Haynes, and Alvin Kallichara­n.

WINDRUSH WARS

The Test series in England during the long, hot summer of 1976 was when the West Indies had the first opportunit­y to unleash their fearsome bowling attack and incredible batsmen against their former colonial master. A rampaging Holding and Roberts took 56 of the 84 wickets that fell in a 3-0 series victory. Viv Richard’s superlativ­e displays (829 runs at an average of 118.42) and Michael Holding’s explosive 28 wickets in four Tests for an average of 12 runs, gave the long-suffering West Indian community in Britain – the “Windrush generation” of immigrants – a great sense of pride that had been denied them in broader British society.

The Caribbean cricketers had been motivated to succeed by the condescend­ing comments of the South African-born England captain Tony Greig, who noted that the West Indians were overrated and that he would make them “grovel”. Some regarded the comment as racist, with the image of a subservien­t dog grovelling before its dominant master. The West Indian team used this as extra motivation to send a message to the Mother Country and its former “white Dominions”.

This was the context for the overwhelmi­ng displays of black pride by West Indians attending Tests at the Oval, Lord’s, Old Trafford, and Nottingham. Senior Caribbean players persistent­ly reminded their younger counterpar­ts never to forget that they were playing for their often-maligned compatriot­s living in England. Gordon Greenidge had a personal grudge in this series, having lived in England from the age of eight,

and having experience­d widespread racism at school. The formidable West Indian team again beat England 5-0 in 1984-1985, leading to the famous “Blackwash” headline. Richards, H.A. Gomes, and Greenidge excelled with the bat, while speed merchants Joel Garner and Malcolm Marshall performed magic with the ball.

PIPER OF PAN-AFRICANISM

The Viv Richards era between 1985 and 1995 was even more impressive than Lloyd’s as he never lost a test series despite having to rebuild the team with players like Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh, and Patrick Patterson. Richards’ Somerset teammate and close friend, England all-rounder, Ian Botham, paid the Antiguan the ultimate tribute in describing him as a better batsman than the legendary Australian Don Bradman. The Antiguan became the first global superstar of cricket in the television age. He coolly chewed gum as he effortless­ly sauntered his way to countless Test centuries. Richards was a supreme batsman and problem solver. Like

legendary Panamanian-Jamaican, George Headley, his sighting of the ball and movement of his feet were outstandin­g. He was totally fearless against any range of bowlers (refusing to wear protective helmets), and he had a range of spectacula­r strokes.

Politicall­y, Richards was the ultimate Pied Piper of Pan-Africanism who spoke through his bat – which he described as a sword – in uncompromi­sing anticoloni­al tones. He literally wore his anti-racism on his sleeves, with his red-gold-and-green armband representi­ng the blood shed by his people and the wealth that had been stolen from Africa and its diaspora. As he bluntly put it: “I believe very strongly in the black man asserting himself in this world.” Richards thus embraced the Black Power movement in the US. He listened to Bob Marley’s “battlefiel­d music” to relax before games and proudly embraced the widely marginalis­ed Rastafaria­n community.

Richards strongly believed that his team was on a sacred mission to prove the equality of black people with the rest of the world, bluntly stating that “playing cricket is in itself a political action.” He clearly explained why he turned down a reported $1 million to play in apartheid South Africa: “As long as the black majority in South Africa remains suppressed by the apartheid system, I could never come to terms with playing cricket there. I would be letting down my own people back in Antigua, and it would destroy my self-esteem.” The Antiguan thus used cricket to wage a broader liberation struggle: “I would like to think that I carried my bat for the liberation of Africa and other oppressed people everywhere.”

FROM CALYPSO TO COLOSSUS

Between February 1980 and March 1995, the West Indian cricket team went unbeaten in Test series, becoming one of the greatest teams in the history of sport. The fact that the West Indians maintained their dominance over two decades finally shattered the negative stereotype­s of a lack of organisati­onal discipline among black people across the globe. The Caribbean Colossus had finally trumped the West Indian Calypso.

 ?? GLEANER ARCHIVES ?? The West Indies cricket team which drew the first Test with Australia which ended at Sabina Park in 1973 (sitting from left) Maurice Foster, Lane Gibbs, Rohan Kanhai (captain), Clyde Walcott (manager), Clive Lloyd and Roy Fredericks; (Standing from left) Uton Dowe, Geoffrey Greenidge, Vanburn Holder, Michael Findlay, Lawrence Rowe, Inshan Ali and Alvin Kallicharr­an.
GLEANER ARCHIVES The West Indies cricket team which drew the first Test with Australia which ended at Sabina Park in 1973 (sitting from left) Maurice Foster, Lane Gibbs, Rohan Kanhai (captain), Clyde Walcott (manager), Clive Lloyd and Roy Fredericks; (Standing from left) Uton Dowe, Geoffrey Greenidge, Vanburn Holder, Michael Findlay, Lawrence Rowe, Inshan Ali and Alvin Kallicharr­an.
 ?? ?? Adekeye Adebajo GUEST COLUMNIST
Adekeye Adebajo GUEST COLUMNIST
 ?? GLEANER ARCHIVES ?? Members of the victorious West Indies team, led by vice-captain Viv Richards (third from left), take a long good look at the Sir Frank Worrell Trophy shortly after it was presented to the captain Clive Lloyd by Lady Velda Worrell, widow of the late Sir Frank Worrell, at Sabina Park on Wednesday May 2, 1984.The trophy was contested for by West Indies and Australia. Looking on (from left) are; Jeffrey Dujon, Gordon Greenidge, emergency fieldsman Ordelmo Peters, Roger Harper (partly hidden), Desmond Haynes, Richie Richardson, Joel Gardner and Malcolm Marshall.
GLEANER ARCHIVES Members of the victorious West Indies team, led by vice-captain Viv Richards (third from left), take a long good look at the Sir Frank Worrell Trophy shortly after it was presented to the captain Clive Lloyd by Lady Velda Worrell, widow of the late Sir Frank Worrell, at Sabina Park on Wednesday May 2, 1984.The trophy was contested for by West Indies and Australia. Looking on (from left) are; Jeffrey Dujon, Gordon Greenidge, emergency fieldsman Ordelmo Peters, Roger Harper (partly hidden), Desmond Haynes, Richie Richardson, Joel Gardner and Malcolm Marshall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica