By Tony Becca
Jamaicagleaner.com
West Indies cricket continues to amaze, and it continues to do so to those who are blinkered and refuse to see, or cannot see, the shortcomings of the regional game.
The shortcomings of the regional game, the quick fix method to the problems, the selections of some of the teams, and the failure of the team to win were exposed once again in the defeat to New Zealand in the just-concluded series.
After losing the first Test at Sabina Park, the West Indies dropped a few players, recovered to win the second Test at Queen's Park Oval, and then, with everything set for an exciting finish at Kensington Oval, dropped a player who had done well on his Test debut and limped to a disappointing loss in a rain-shortened game.
The West Indies, to be fair, were affected by injuries to one or two players who did not play, and to two or three players who did play. That, however, was not the reason for the defeat. The reason, or reasons, was the poor standard of cricket in the region, or to be more exact, the unprofessional way of developing cricket in the region.
For too long, for loss after loss, those in charge of cricket in the West Indies talk about the things they need to do for the next match. Managers, coaches, captains, and senior players all talk about the need to focus, to concentrate, to fight, and to do all kinds of things.
They never once talked about the quality of the players available, those who look good, but seldom performed, those who reel off a few shots against good deliveries, but not enough of them, and those who are selected time and time again despite not making runs or not taking wickets, those who are constantly "promising" players, maybe the next Garry Sobers or the next Viv Richards.
They are always making sweet-sounding excuses, and they are always talking about batting longer and about bowling a better line and length as if they are the easiest things to do, and making centuries and taking a handful of wickets, which they did. And then they return the next day and do the same things all over again