
Kevin
O'Brien Chang -Contributed Is cricket dying in Jamaica? It certainly
appears so on the face of it. Practically no one watches our club and schoolboy
leagues. Even first-class matches draw few spectators.
Maybe 1,000 people
were at the recent Trinidad-Jamaica Carib Cup match and maybe 2,000 at the KFC
limited-overs game. Parish club football matches regularly draw throngs many times
as large. But cricket folk have such low expectations these days that such pitiful
gatherings were considered 'good crowds'.
As if to emphasise the game's decline,
this year for the first time ever the regional first-class games were not covered
on radio - diehards had to get scores from the internet site CaribbeanCricket.com,
the most reliable source of information on West Indies cricket.
Passionate
cricket lovers
Yet, callers on the local sports radio shows seem to talk about
little else but cricket. Suggesting that there are still a lot of very passionate
cricket lovers out there. In fact, speaking to friends who are keen aficionados
of the game but haven't been to a match this year, the problem seems primarily
a lack of time. There are now so many claims on people's attention that no one
can afford to spend a whole day doing anything these days.
So if cricket is
to survive as a spectator sport, it must adapt to the times or die. The problem
is our administrators seem to be living in the Stone Age. Instead of looking at
how England has rejuvenated county cricket with night-time 20-overs cricket, they
simply moan and groan about "back in my day".
The fact is in the 'good old
days' there were only one TV and two radio stations. Now there are 20 radio stations
and 100-plus cable channels and everyone has a car and cellphone.
It's an
age of instant gratification that demands short bursts of intense excitement,
not afternoons of leisurely contemplation. It's a time of two-hour movies, not
1,000-page novels.
Alan Stanford tried to show West Indies cricket administrators
the way with his 20/20 league. But they seem mighty slow on the uptake. Some innovative
ideas like the SDC 20/20 community league have been put in place. But our local
clubs need to follow suit.
A night-time 20/20 league at places like Melbourne
would surely draw a lot of fans, especially if they tried to create the kind of
party atmosphere so successful in England.
And our schools should be trying
to get bat and balls into more youngsters' hands with, say, 20/20 house cricket
and a 20/20 school competition. One thing is sure, if the youths of this generation
stop playing the game there will be no cricketers in 10 years and the game must
die.
As to those
who fear 20/20 will ruin cricket as we know it, well, better 20/20 than no cricket
at all. And anyway, in cricket and life appreciation of slower tempos increases
with age. The adolescent love of dancehall and rap matures into an adult appreciation
of jazz and classical music. Start boys liking 20/20 and they will learn to enjoy
50-overs and then Test cricket as men.
Of
course, the other aspect to the decline in spectator support for cricket is the
pathetic performance of the West Indies team. Which again is primarily due to
dinosaur-minded administrators. They have not only lagged in marketing the game,
they are totally backwards on the sports science aspects.
Last
week I heard a very interesting discussion between Dr. Paul Wright, Dr. Paul Auden
and a number of sports nutritionists on how clueless cricket was on a simple thing
like rehydration. The gentlemanly drinks every hour is totally inadequate, especially
for fast bowlers going all out. They require boundary stations with cooled drinks,
and can't only drink when thirsty. On the last day in the Trinidad and Tobago-Jamaica
match at Alpart the Jamaican bowlers were clearly dehydrated, causing a loss of
control that resulted in 54 extras out of 320 runs.
The
good doctors said cricket fast bowling is one of the most strenuous jobs in sport,
requiring the endurance of a 400-800 metres runner, with 100-metre form bursts
and the arm and shoulder and back effort of a javelin thrower. Fast bowlers have
to sprint about 40 metres six times in about three minutes, take a four-minute
rest, and do it again. A six-over spell is the rough equivalent of six 400-metre
races in an hour.
Outdated
traditions
But
instead of taking advantage of Jamaica's world-class track and field expertise,
our cricket fraternity seems to prefer to rely on outdated traditions. Australia,
England, South Africa and New Zealand have moved far ahead of the West Indies
in every aspect of the game, primarily because they take advantage of the latest
developments in sports science. It's certainly not a matter of natural talent.
Because these same countries that regularly trounce the West Indies are invariably
outclassed by Jamaica alone at the World Athletics Championships.
Can
you imagine if one of our world-class coaches like Stephen Francis, Glen Mills
and Maurice Wilson was to put the 10 best fast bowlers in the West Indies into
a rigorous track programme for three months? They would soon be doing on the cricket
field what Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson are now doing on the track. Namely,
blowing away all opponents.
Trinidad,
probably due to Brian Lara's influence, is the West Indian regional team that
has tried hardest to move its cricket into the modern age. And the results are
showing. T&T has been winning everything in sight over the past couple years.
Our Jamaican administrators should take a trip and see exactly what the Trinis
are doing right.
Like
all Jamaicans I want the Cricket World Cup 2007 to be a big success. Recent developments
have certainly been very promising. A month ago Australia looked a predictably
boring sure thing and England appeared no-hopers.
But
with Australia in decline and England on the rise, this now appears the most open
World Cup in history, with all eight Test teams having a realistic chance of winning
the whole thing. This extra dose of glorious uncertainty can only increase the
event's appeal to potential overseas visitors.
Let's
hope the gods keep smiling and that, despite all the talked-about hitches, things
work out nicely in the end. We West Indians may be a last-minute people, but we
usually get the job done, even if in the nick of time.
Boring
billboards
Although
I must say those boring and bland WC 2007 billboards are the worst I have ever
seen, what should be there is not some corporate committee ugly mongoose-looking
character, but a picture of our boys saying "We're gonna win it for you."
It makes you wonder if the organisers are missing the forest for the trees. I
mean, you can't even get shirts with players' names on the back.
For
all the hype, the biggest factor in the success of the tournament will be the
performance of the West Indies team. If they do well, all will be well. Yes, it's
hard to put much faith in players who have broken our hearts so often.
But
we Caribbean folk are nothing if not perpetual optimists. And it's not like our
guys don't have talent. And they will have us cheering West Indian crowds behind
them.
So come
on, Brian and Chris and Ram and Shiv and Jerome. Win it for us. Or at least make
us proud.
changkob@hotmail.com