Khaleej Times

Cricket is dancing again to the Caribbean calypso

West Indies find their rhythm in world cricket with a thumping Test series victory over England after more than a decade in the dumps. What next? The prospect of a mouth-watering contest against India awaits fans this year

- James astill — Open magazine James Astill is the Washington bureau chief and Lexington columnist for The Economist

Almost everyone I encountere­d in St Lucia, between touching down at Vieux Fort Quarter on the southern tip of the island to my arrival at the Darren Sammy Stadium on the northern tip the following day, told that they were looking forward to watching some live Test cricket. Henix, who I chatted with while disembarki­ng from the plane from Atlanta, the smartly dressed policemen at immigratio­n, the friendly women in the tourist informatio­n office, my taxi-driver David, guesthouse owner Moses, and half a dozen others: all said they were planning to attend at least a day of the game. There were plenty of tickets still on sale, they said. And what cricket fan could resist?

The last of a three-Test series between West Indies and England, this game would be only the eighth five-day game ever held in the lovely Windward island. It would also be the first held against England, the former colonial power whom all West Indians, including the 170,000 St Lucians, especially love to beat. More gloriously still, West Indies had already secured the series — for the first time against England in a decade — having won the two previous Tests in Barbados and Antigua. The St Lucia Test would be a victory parade. From the very first over, it would be a celebratio­n of what was starting to look like the Holy Grail of internatio­nal cricket: a genuine West Indian resurgence.

The victories in Barbados and Antigua had not been lucky or even close. The islanders, superbly led by their young captain, Jason Holder, the top-ranked allrounder in the world, had annihilate­d the complacent and overrated English players. In Bridgetown, the beating heart of Caribbean cricket, they had won by 365 runs — West Indies’ third-biggest winning margin ever. At the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, scene of the second Test, they had won by 10 wickets. These were margins to recall the West Indian hegemony of the 1980s and early 90s, when the Caribbean islanders went 15 years unbeaten in Test series. And they were secured in a style that recalled that heyday: in particular through fiery fast-bowling.

In Kemar Roach, Shannon Gabriel, Alzarri Joseph and Holder himself, West Indies had their best battery of pace bowlers in many years. The quickest of them, Gabriel, was terrifying on a bouncy wicket; 22-year-old Joseph was almost as quick, more skilful, and looked like one of the best younger bowlers in the world. Holder was not only one of the world’s top-ranked seamers, but also good enough with the bat to have struck an immaculate double-century in Barbados. After so many dreadful years for fans of West Indian cricket, what a glorious prospect this third Test in St Lucia was! To complete the occasion, it would also be West Indies last home Test before India tour the Caribbean, later this year, after the World Cup. I was looking forward to considerin­g how the resurgent islanders might get on against the world’s top-ranked Test side.

Waking in a state of nervous excitement on the morning of the game, I wondered how long I should allow myself to get to the ground. It was a Saturday, so most of the islanders would be off-work: another reason to expect a big crowd. The weather was perfect. A shimmering sun was already burning away wisps of sea-mist from an azure Caribbean sky. The country road to the stadium, named after St Lucia’s only Test player, the former West Indies captain and now jobbing T20 player, would surely be choked. I certainly did not want to risk being late. This would be my first experience of watching cricket in the Caribbean: a pilgrimage of sorts, for any cricket fan old enough to re- member the 1980s. I therefore left my guesthouse in good time. Yet it quickly transpired that I had been misinforme­d.

There were a good few people on the winding back-road to the stadium, but almost all except their drivers were White tourists. More were string along in the roadside. There gaggles of English retirees in sensible sun-hats, enjoying a sunny break from the English winter, and there were bigger parties of boisterous young Englishmen, sunburned and topless or wearing England shirts. There were hardly any West Indian cricket fans, on the road, outside the stadium, or seated inside it. It had been the same story in the previous Tests—which is why my hopes of a decent local turnout were unrealisti­c from the start. In the quarter of a century that has passed since West Indian cricketers were great, the people of the Anglophone Caribbean have largely given up on Test cricket. There is no other explanatio­n for their no-show against England. The reasons for this change are contested, however, in part because the subject of Caribbean cricket’s astonishin­g rise and calamitous is rife with idle speculatio­n. Yet it is important to understand them correctly. Because where West Indian cricket goes, the game at large could follow.

Writing on a more routine cricketing slaughter of the English in Jamaica in 1986, at the height of the glory years, one West Indian commentato­r detected an air of apathy in the crowded stadium. Winning, he surmised, had become too predictabl­e to be altogether enjoyable. West Indies cricket fans had started taking their team’s world domination for granted. Then how to explain the lack of black faces at the Darren Sammy stadium? I put that question to Lance Gibbs, the great Guyanan spinbowler who, now aged 84 but still spry, had flown over to St Lucia to watch the game. “They don’t like losers,” he said of the West Indian fans. “If you’re not winning, they’re not going to support you.”

That attitude underpins the shift in cricketing emption Caribbean islanders have undergone. Cricket is almost certainly still the region’s most popular game. There are possible island exceptions: Trinidadia­ns love soccer, as do Jamaicans, who also adore athletics, especially when their sprinters are running rampant at the Olympics. But the American sports, especially basketball, that are often said to have supplanted cricket in the Caribbean in reality hardly figure. Most primary schoolchil­dren play cricket. Driving up and down St Lucia’s coastal roads, along which most of the islanders’ live, there seemed to be a decent turf pitch outside every school. Cricket’s roots in the Caribbean, for all the game’s notorious mismanagem­ent in the region, are deep. Cricket is still the region’s shared passion, its common denominato­r. “It is what unites us,” mused Gibbs.

As that might suggest, cricket was always much more than a game to the islanders. When West Indies played their first Test match in 1928 the islands were still White-run colonies. It would be another 32 years before Frank Worrell became the first non-white West Indies captain. Cricketing excellence was in the meantime a rare means for black islanders to thrive and dream — least because of the steady procession of world-beating players they produced. George Headley, the “black Bradman”, was one of the world’s best players of the 1930s and 40s, and a figure

While the West Indies once again have a cohort of serious pacemen in their ranks, so, for the first time ever, does India. It will be the first ever faceoff between Indian and West Indian fast-bowling, marshalled by the two most impressive captains.

of enormous political significan­ce. And after Headley came the revered ‘three Ws’—the Barbadian trio of Worrell, Clyde Walcott, Everton Weekes. Largely through their batting feats, West Indies started winning regularly. By 1960, they had won 25 of their 86 Tests. India, by contrast, had won only six out of 70 at the time. And of course things were about to get so substantia­lly better for the West Indies that they would start to forget what losing felt like. Led by their murder squads of fast-bowlers, the West Indies ruled cricket from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s with a relentless consistenc­y unparallel­ed in sport. There really has been else nothing like it: not the Boston Celtics in basketball during the 1960s, or Brazil’s footballer­s in any age. The mismatch between the tiny size of the West Indian population and the enormity of their success defied explanatio­n. Antigua, with an impoverish­ed population of 50,000, produced the best batsman of the era in Viv Richards. It also produced Ritchie Richardson, Andy Roberts, Eldine Baptiste, Curtley Ambrose and Winston Benjamin, among others, all of whom would walk into any internatio­nal cricket side today. By the same token, such remarkable over-performanc­e was always likely to be unsustaina­ble.

It was the product of a remarkable sporting monopoly over the islanders’ interests and talents. Every Caribbean boy wanted to play for the West Indies.

Yet a sporting dominance based on such an unusual maxing out of the available talent pool was necessaril­y fragile. After the team’s fortunes dipped, in the 1990s, at a time when economic growth, rising opportunit­ies for outward migration, and the distractio­ns of the media had started creating competing outlets for the islanders’ attention, the slump was dramatic. And as it has endured, so the weaknesses inherit in trying to forge a strong regional identity in cricket from so many disparate nations have become apparent. “Cricket is also what divides us,” reflected Gibbs.

He was thinking of the furious arguments between islanders that West Indies’ selections often invoke. The regional prejudices and rivalries that have always dogged Indian selections seem manageable by comparison. Last time India played a Test in St Lucia there were at one point more local fans outside the ground protesting against Sammy’s recent exclusion from the

West Indian T20 side than inside watching the cricket.

Indeed, while India’s regional prejudices are fading with the dual success of the Indian cricket team and Indian economy, the dream of regional cooperatio­n that the

West Indian team was founded on has largely evaporated. The West Indies Federation, a hoped-for grand political union launched in 1958, lasted only four years.

The weakness of the West Indies side, coinciding with the deepening anomaly of a regional Caribbean identity, goes a long way to explaining this. But commercial pressures, unrelieved by the arrogance and selfishnes­s of cricket’s economic masters, the Indian board, and to a lesser degree the boards of England and Australia, have made matters much worse. Compared to their great West Indian forebears, Holder and his team-mates are handsomely rewarded. A player contracted by both the West Indian board and a Caribbean Premier League team such as the St Lucia Stars earns around $400,000 a year. Then again, this is so much less than the best English, Australian and Indian players earn, and so much less than a career as a jobbing T20 star pays, that the best West Indian players have increasing­ly taken the latter course. The IPL and other T20 franchises have robbed West Indian cricket of Chris Gayle, Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russsell and Sunil Narine, among many others.

A cricketing catchment of just 6 million people, across Guyana and the islands, cannot easily survive such a talent drain. Meanwhile, the popular enthusiasm for T20 franchise cricket, the source of the drain, has been replicated in the Caribbean. The CPL plays to packed stadiums. This is perhaps not only because the crowds love T20. It may also be because their local franchise, such as the Stars in St Lucia, matches the islanders’ sense of national identity more closely than the jaded West Indies. (Never mind that all the CPL franchises are owned by Indians or Indian Americans— including Philadelph­ia-based Jay Pandya, owner of the Stars.)

These related developmen­ts, the rise of T20 franchise cricket, the downgradin­g of internatio­nal cricket, and the slow death of Test cricket are the current reality of cricket in the Caribbean. Meanwhile, the same cocktail of changes is being felt, albeit less powerfully, in every other cricket region. Cricket’s tectonic plates grind slowly. The institutio­nal support for Test and all internatio­nal cricket will keep them alive for a good while yet—even if that means a lot of cricket being played in empty stadiums. Yet it is hard not to see in this a vision of cricket’s future.

For the many who still revere Test cricket, and who consider that cricket’s internatio­nal culture adds an irreplacea­ble drama to the game, this is deeply depressing. Indeed, I found it hard not to be dismayed by the St Lucians’ lack of interest in the game at the Darren Sammy that I felt so fortunate to have watched. But at least I had the consolatio­n of some excellent Test cricket. The England team’s improvemen­t in this game, which included an overdue century by Joe Root and victory by 232 runs, was welcome, and satisfying for an England fan. But it did not take away from the West Indian triumph overall, which, for a Test cricket fan, was more satisfying still.

The Indians, when they come touring after the World Cup, should present the West Indians with a stiffer challenge than England did. While the West Indies once again have a cohort of serious pacemen in their ranks, so, for the first time ever, does India. It will be the first ever face-off between Indian and West Indian fast-bowling, marshalled by the two most impressive captains, Holder and Virat Kohli, in internatio­nal cricket. It is a glorious prospect. Cricket fans everywhere must enjoy it while we can.

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