Sportstar

The cricket world needs West Indies to flourish

The cricket world needs the West Indies team for the special flair they bring to the game. They are crowd pleasers and crowd pullers and that’s why it’s in everyone’s interest to see the game flourish there.

- SUNIL GAVASKAR

What a brilliant performanc­e from our athletes at the Commonweal­th Games! The best part was that a lot of the medal-winners bettered their previous bests and set new bar for themselves.

There were many winners in different categories. Of course, each sport has its own challenges, but the performanc­e of Sharath Kamal in table tennis was simply mindblowin­g. To win a gold medal in such a fast sport is tough enough, but to do it at the age of 40 is simply sensationa­l. It’s not just a tribute to his talent but to his dedication, determinat­ion and discipline, and above all, to his dream to excel. He is not just a legend but a super legend, and deserves every accolade that he gets.

The change in attitude in Indian sports over the years has been amazing. No longer are our athletes going to such mega events merely to participat­e. They are going there to win, and that’s so refreshing. Kudos to all those who have made this mental transforma­tion possible. There is, of course, disappoint­ment when our athletes don’t win, but no longer that despair of earlier times when sports lovers would question why our athletes would be sent to such big events if they had zero chance of winning a medal.

Our cricket team has once again covered itself in glory by beating the West Indies comfortabl­y in the white-ball formats. That they did so without some of our major stars is even more heartening as it shows the depth of talent there is in the country. West Indies may not be the destructiv­e team they were a couple of decades ago but they are still the only team that has won the ICC T20 World Cup twice. They are always a dangerous side and that’s why this comprehens­ive win does boost the Indian team’s chances of greater glory in the next few months.

It was sad to read the West Indies coach saying he can’t beg players to play for the West Indies. Many top West Indies players were not available for the series against India for a variety of reasons and so they were not at full strength. But even then, to see them lose by the margins they did was shocking. In the final T20 game, they lost all their wickets to the Indian spinners playing some truly forgettabl­e couldn’t-care-less shots to give India a huge win.

Like most countries, Cricket West Indies

has some of its players on a retainer contract. If some of those players make themselves unavailabl­e for playing when they are not injured, then the cricket board should look at cutting down the amount in the contract. After all, the contract is to ensure that the player is available to play for the West Indies. If he makes himself unavailabl­e, he should be prepared to accept a cut in the contract amount.

Knowing the West Indian temperamen­t, if there is a guaranteed amount in the contract, then there is no incentive to go above and beyond the call of duty. The earlier generation­s of great West Indies players had the Test match fee as the major source of their income and so would give it their fiercest best so they could play in the next Test match and earn some more. Now, with income guaranteed thanks to the retainer, it hardly makes a difference to the player whether he scores only a few runs and takes no wickets or drops catches. He will get his contracted fee even if he is dropped for the next few games.

Perhaps the answer could be in doing away with the retainer and instead increasing the match fee manifold so the player gives his best so as to be selected for the next match.

It’s not an easy call to make in these times and in a region where each island is an independen­t country with its own currency. The cricket world needs the West Indies team for the special flair they bring to the game. They are crowd pleasers and crowd pullers and that’s why it’s in everyone’s interest to see the game flourish there.

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 ?? AP ?? Falling like ninepins: West Indies’ Jason Holder walks off offering little resistence in the fifth T20I against India in Lauderhill, Florida. The 88-run defeat handed India a 4-1 series win.
AP Falling like ninepins: West Indies’ Jason Holder walks off offering little resistence in the fifth T20I against India in Lauderhill, Florida. The 88-run defeat handed India a 4-1 series win.

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