When
in the mood, Brian Lara was a genius, no less. Caribbean
flair, and not any textbook principles, was the hallmark of his batting. High
backlift, braced knees, a hop this way and that in the crease, flashing blade and
terrific bat speed, and deft wrist-work on either side of the wicket were
characteristics of his inimitable style. When he put his mind to it, he was
amongst the very best ever, in the traditional form perhaps next only to
Bradman.
As
super success embraced him, Lara was quick to assume the airs of a megastar.
Petulance, brushes with authority and stormy personal life began to cast a
shadow over his career. For a long time it seemed that he might go the way of
so many hugely talented sportsmen like George Best who frittered away their
God-given gifts and ultimately destroyed themselves.
It
is said that the pressure of expectations got the better of Lara. To his
credit, he broke free of the stupor and applied his mind to his batting,
returning as one of the greatest rungetters the game has seen. The difference
between Lara and Tendulkar - hugely talented as both are in their unique ways -
was that Tendulkar remained grounded, a dedicated player, committed team man,
modest and content in the security of family life. He never allowed the
unprecedented adulation to swamp him, nor did the burden of having to perform
constantly stifle him. He sailed along, darling of millions, everyone’s very
own endearing Sachin. If he had a flaw, as we have already discussed, it was
that he would get carried away by his own brilliance and give his wicket away
when there were many, many more runs for the taking.
That
277 at Sydney in 1992-93, Lara’s first Test hundred, when the West Indies were
desperately defending their status as top dogs, was only advance notice of what
was to follow. Lara emulated Bradman by holding the records for the highest
scores in Tests as well as first-class cricket. Sir Garfield Sobers walked on
to the Antigua Recreation Ground to embrace Lara as the new hero went past his
Test record. In that 1993-94 series against England, Lara hit up 798 runs at an
average of 99.75.
The
world had still not stopped applauding Lara when he astounded everyone by
piling up an unbeaten 501 for Warwickshire versus Durham
at Birmingham.
It was a new frontier - as a famous television series on space odysseys
declared - where no man had gone before. In a matter of days he did what no
batsman, not Grace nor Bradman, had done in 117 years. The English bowlers must
have dreaded the sight of his punishing blade as he carved out 765 runs in the
six-Test series on their soil in 1995 at an average of 85.
In
between, Lara had not relished the slower wickets of India during the 1994-95 series.
Not long after, when the euphoria of having scaled great highs so early in his
career wore off, Lara began appearing listless and disinterested. It was akin
to the feeling of unease that Bradman experienced in 1932, but Lara’s malaise
was more severe. Bradman never allowed his performances to dip, Lara could not
defy his slump.
He
recovered, to the good fortune of cricket-lovers around the world. The first
sign of a turnaround came in 1998-99. That season his stock had slumped to
abysmal depths in South Africa
as the West Indies were trounced 5-0 in the
Test series. Then they were beaten by Australia in the first Test at
home. There were shrill voices all around demanding that Lara be stripped of
the captaincy. And then he struck. He scored a superb 213 to lead the West
Indies to victory over Steve Waugh’s side at Kingston. In the very next Test at Bridgetown he carried his
team to an exhilarating one-wicket triumph with a stupendous unbeaten 153. So
gripping was the game that the Jamaican prime minister postponed meetings to
watch the finale. The West Indies actually led
the series 2-1 now, and Lara was again being hailed as a superhero everywhere.
This was akin to Bradman’s stirring fightback in 1936-37, but not quite as
decisive in the end. The Australians eventually levelled the series, but Lara
had once again shown what he was really capable of.
The
big turnaround eventually came in 2001-02 in the Emerald Island after a
prolonged illness. He began with his 221 off the Sri Lankan bowling at Colombo in that landmark
season. In three Tests, Lara scored 668 runs at an average of 114.66 with 3
hundreds. Though he suffered a serious arm injury as a result of a mid-pitch
collision, he came back stronger than ever. Since that series, in the last six
years till his retirement from Test cricket in 2006-07, he scored an average of
a Test double century a year.
When
Sri Lanka made a return
visit to the Caribbean islands the next
season, Lara slammed 209 at Gros Islet. After he regained the captaincy in
2003, and perhaps consumed by a burning desire to finish his career in a blaze
of glory, Lara was unstoppable. He played two big knocks in the 2003-04 season.
He first slammed 202 against South Africa
at Johannesburg.
During the course of that innings he hit the highest number of runs in an over
in Test cricket. He smashed Robin Peterson for 4.6.6.4.4.4, a total of 28 runs.
Matthew Hayden had taken away Lara’s Test record that
season. The Prince of Trinidad, though, was not ready to be dethroned. And so
Hayden had the pleasure, and privilege, of being Test cricket’s top-scorer for
only a few months. Lara returned to the
same venue and against the very opponents of a decade earlier and reclaimed his
coveted record. Again he went to a territory no Test cricketer had treaded
before, reaching 400 before he returned unconquered. He had emulated Bradman by
hitting up two scores of 300-plus in Test cricket. India’s Virender Sehwag joined the
club at Chennai in 2007-08. But while Bradman was never able to reset the Test
record, Lara, incredibly, got it back. That there was a gap of a decade between
the two high watermarks, makes his achievements even more laudable.
(Author Indra Vikram Singh can be contacted
on email singh_iv@hotmail.com).
Don’s
CenturyPublished
in India by Sporting Links
ISBN
978-81-901668-5-0
Fully
illustrated
Paperback
French Fold 11 x 8.5 x 0.4 inches
Weight
480 grams
188
pages
Available
on Amazon at an attractive price: https://www.amazon.in/dp/8190166859
Indra
Vikram Singh's other books available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.in/s?k=Indra+Vikram+Singh&i=stripbooks&rh=p_6%3AA3HSV0N9AV7NOK&dc&qid=1602408830&rnid=1318474031&ref=sr_nr_p_6_1