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Time to shed ‘Calypso cricketer’ tag, again

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  • Time to shed ‘Calypso cricketer’ tag, again

    Cricinfo October 8, 2012
    Posted 9 hours, 56 minutes ago in West Indies Cricket On the road to being 'Calypso cricketers' no more? © Getty Images

    By MV Swaroop, India
    For as long as I can remember, I've been a fan of West Indies. It started, I think, in 1989, when, as a five-year-old living on the western coast of India, I watched an India-West Indies game, and thought that the West Indians were my own people – from the west of India.
    By the 1992 World Cup, I was old enough to have checked an atlas to find the islands that made up the West Indies, but I loved Richie Richardson's hat and Curtly Ambrose's bowling action enough to continue supporting them. Even over India.
    While my lasting memory from the Hero Cup was Sachin Tendulkar's over against South Africa, I remember being quite upset when West Indies were mowed down by Anil Kumble in the final. When the ‘Padams’ series of 1994 happened, in gully cricket, my bat became completely secondary to my batting. A year later, West Indies surrendered a Test series for the first time in my life – to Australia, at home. In 1996, Australia stole a World Cup final berth from under their noses. Then, they lost a Test series 3-2 to Australia, this time away. Something told me that being a West Indies fan would be infinitely tougher that point onward.
    Brian Lara remained an obsession. I derived warmth from the sight of the ageing duo of Ambrose and Courtney Walsh continuing to make batsmen tap-dance. It got tougher after their retirements. The tireless Shivnarine Chanderpaul provided much comfort, and occasionally, the others provided some excitement. Overall, though, I consoled myself with sporadic displays of spark, or the rare successful skirmish, the occasional individual brilliance amid a regularly shambolic team performance.
    I watched Fire in Babylon recently at Sathyam Cinemas in Chennai. The crowd was of two kinds – youth, who had heard so much about "that West Indies team" and old men who had felt the fire of that team crackling through their radios. It was nostalgia for some, and reflected nostalgia for the others.
    Fire in Babylon is a compelling narrative. It has bright, striking and awe-inspiring protagonists who speak with honour and pride about the time when they ruled the world. It sets them among the cultures – as the movie reminds you repeatedly, there is no one West Indian culture – they are so proud of. It sets them amid the politics that so defined their existence (CLR James wrote that, in the West Indies, you had arrived if your company was of a lighter skin-tone than you).
    It also tells of the reputation they carried prior to those glory days, that of the entertaining losers. ‘Calypso cricketers’ was the term, those happy-go-lucky entertainers, who might just pull off something exceptionally brilliant, but just don't do it with the regularity or professionalism of a champion. Those amiable, popular, fun losers…
    The term could also be used to describe the West Indies team of today. In Chris Gayle, Kieron Pollard, Darren Sammy, Marlon Samuels, Dwayne Bravo and Andre Russell, they have a surprising number of batsmen who can clear the boundary with damaging consistency. In Sunil Narine, they have a freak spinner, whom, despite two years of video analysis, no one seems to have an answer to. All these cricketers, barring Sammy, are among the top-billed in T20 leagues across the world. Still, people would not have been surprised if they had imploded in crucial games at the World Twenty20.
    The batch of ’76 was humiliated by defeat to Australia. That made them push themselves harder. World Twenty20 aside, the current team has been losing consistently for a decade and a half. Clearly, the humiliation of defeat can't jolt them much anymore. Clive Lloyd's men were pushed into a corner by racism and discrimination. They represented, symbolically, black peoples all over the Commonwealth – no other blacks played international cricket at that point. Sammy's team does not face that pressure.
    But the West Indies today have their own set of issues. The players have had innumerable issues with an erratic board. The ensuing rift within the side led to the exile of their best batsman. The coming together of various "dots on the map" into one regional team seems artificial. Perhaps this is the reason why West Indian players find it easier to choose club over international cricket – it is one artificial entity over another, isn't it?
    To that extent, the success of the West Indies lies in something similar to what Lloyd's team faced – an assertion of their identity. Of showing that there is more to their game than raw power, but retaining that power, unquestionably their biggest strength, at the centre of their game. Of showing that the common West Indian cricketing identity still means something to them. Of showing that they can play, consistently, effectively, efficiently and yet thrillingly, flamboyantly, instinctively, as one single cricket team. If those guys did it, why can't we?

  • #2
    Ah nuh shed wi waan, but a di right mixture wi need again jus like weh di greats dem did have.

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    • #3
      calypso i do not mind ... collapso has got to go.

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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      • #4
        Whatever....

        I suspect you guys have not yet reached middle age. So we managed to beat little Sri Lanka. Wonderful. But I can’t help recalling with nostalgia the years in which the West Indies cricket team won the World Cup in TEST CRICKET!

        Anyway, our overall standards and expectations economically, politically and socially have fallen drastically in recent times, so why should sports be any different?

        Oh, by the way, congratulations West Indies.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Historian View Post
          nostalgia the years in which the West Indies cricket team won the World Cup in TEST CRICKET!
          Test cricket World Cup ?

          wasnt the World Cup for 1 DAY (50 OVERS)....
          Sunday, August 28th, 2011. We will never forget !!

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          • #6
            I don't believe there has EVER been a world cup of test cricket. '75 and 79 was the ODI world cup. True we were the top ranked team in test cricket for many years but I am sure the appreciate factual accuracy.

            Fact is "little Sri Lanka" made the finals and have made 4 finals and were also ODI champions a few years back. Also en route to the finals west indies beat England and australia.

            I suppose it is easier and less risky to be a supporter when they are back on top, if ever. Truth is at the end of the day regardless of what is going on, as a west Indian I will cheer for west indies cricket team.

            Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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            • #7
              The first ones were actually 60 overs

              Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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              • #8
                Sri Lanka has not been "little" in cricketing terms since the 1990s. And at any rate as you say they did not just beat Sri Lanka, they are the world champions of T20 cricket and whatever the purists may say that is the form of cricket that is growing in worldwide popularity.

                I am disappointed with Historians comments.
                "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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                • #9
                  Some perspective here Historian...

                  Sri Lanka is neither little in geography (>65,000 sq. kilometres, population (>19M) or cricket pedigree (see http://www.espncricinfo.com/rankings...ge/211271.html) where they are still the #1 ranked T-20 team by the ICC and above West Indies in all formats of the game.
                  More information on Sri Lanka may be see at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Lan...l_cricket_team.





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                  • #10
                    If Historian had watched, I'm sure he would have some interesting comments about their National Anthem from a music perspective....plus it really gets stuck in your head.

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                    • #11
                      Just to reiterate a point... there was and is no World Cup in TEST CRICKET, only a ranking and yes, Windies ruled the roost for about 15 years straight!

                      There should be a World Cup of test cricket or something more than just playing each other for trophies whose names I don't commit to memory.

                      Ok, having said that Historian I am in the prime of middle age and I revelled in this victory. T20 has its own chracter as a format and I genuinely appreciate the entertainment level, PLUS the fact that it has revolutionised fielding for one and bowling , hell and batting for three; I guarantee you that in the days you are referring to, you would not generally see the quality of fielding in this format, generally. Bowlers are forced to bowl accurately as there is no room for error and while some of the inventive cricket shots still do not appeal to me especially when they don't work, when they do score 10 out of 10 for entertainment value... Some of these changes have transferred to the longer formats and IMO I think it is making for a better overall "product" in all forms of cricket.

                      You should get a Red STripe or two , even three and siddung and watch a replay of that match... I guarantee you genuine pleasure and thrills, more than you would get from a run of the mill EPL match... Liverpool played Sunday morning same time... cricket won out overwhelmingly...

                      Mi gawn, gawn guh practise the Gangnam Style dance... LOL!!
                      Peter R

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                      • #12
                        Totally agree with you Peter-R except for the "genuine pleasure and thrills" part. You watched from home I hope. Next ting, tell mi bout this "prime of middle age", I want to plan for it.
                        No comment on your dance skills.

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                        • #13
                          by the end of the match all windies fans were grinning from ear to ear... given where tjeteam was at mid point in its innings, it was for me a thrilling victory... i am sure u agree

                          and yuh trying to tell me u not middle aged? ha ha.. they call that denial...or maybe even "senial" lol
                          Peter R

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                          • #14
                            as for my dance skills, mine are as good as any on the windies except for gayle... i cudden look worse dan any of them...
                            Peter R

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                            • #15
                              That shot that Pollard scooped overhead vs Australia to fine leg for 4 was one of the more memorable.

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