West indian cricket is alive again ! - Cricket
For the new age cricket fans, West Indies would be just any other team, evoking no special feeling or warmth. This was not the case a few decades ago. ‘Imperious’ is the word that sat perfectly on any team from the group of Caribbean islands in the 1970s and 1980s.
Players went about their game with a certain flamboyance that came with a happy-go-lucky touch. And they decimated rivals with a particular flair. Their brand of stroke-making was special and the bowlers from the islands evoked fear in batsmen the world over. The reputation of players sometimes traveled faster to foreign lands than the players themselves. One can still remember the excitement over Malcolm Marshall, the bowling great from Barbados, before his arrival in India the late 1970s.
We are not delving into the glory days of West Indies cricket, only underling the sense of awe they inspired before reducing themselves into also-rans in world cricket. There was Brian Lara somewhere alright, and also a Gayle scoring triple tons in Test cricket but the ferocious reputation of the team had taken a severe beating throughout the 1990s to the early decades of the new century. There were few takers for Test cricket and youngsters were moving to more remunerative sport like basketball. Those were the dark days.
With their performance here, the likes of Gayle, Darren Sammy, Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russel, Lendl Simmons and Johnson Charles have raised a vision of great days for West Indian cricket. The unique brutal stroke-making is there as is the spirit of joie de vivre. The great fiery bowlers are missing in action though. The West Indies had never been short on potential but lacked the sense of application. It’s time they focused more. Old-timers won’t like them to be also-rans in world cricket but the force driving it.Calypso cricket combined entertainment with the game and came to define the brand of cricket West Indies played in those dark days. Many used it as a pejorative expression. The arrival of T20 offered some kind of legitimacy to this brand of cricket, albeit with a touch of gravitas. It doesn’t matter whether the West Indies are into the Calypso mode, but they have found their rhythm. The interest has to extend it to the longer formats of the game, for which there’s some disinterest in the islands.
West Indian cricket owes it to its die-hard fans. It has to display its beauty to the new generation.
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thank you :)