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Windies in crisis

 

Published on: 11/21/2009.


by TONY COZIER

EVERY TIME it appears impossible for things to get any worse for West Indies cricket, they do.
Less than a week before the start of the first Test against Australia at the Gabba in Brisbane, the team’s situation could hardly be gloomier.
Captain Chris Gayle is on the other side of the world, back in Kingston to be with his ill mother, with doubts over when, indeed whether, he will rejoin his team.
A mystery infection has struck down Ramnaresh Sarwan, the key No. 3 batsman, and Jerome Taylor, the one fast bowler with genuine Test experience, is “stiff and sore” and is not playing in the only match prior to the Test, against below-strength state team Queensland who clouted 16 sixes and 73 fours in amassing 617 for seven declared.
Gayle has given no indication of his plans for the immediate future.
He is a keen user of the twitter.com website but his posts on Thursday offered no clue as to the likelihood of getting back to Australia.
Instead, he mentioned a steamed fish meal with his father at Cuddy’s, Courtney Walsh’s restaurant in New Kingston, and the progress of his mother’s heart problem, which forced him home.
He passed on his mother’s “thanks again for those prayers” and reported his visit to her in hospital where a nurse asked him to “wait outside” and the doctor reported that, while “her heart [is] not that good”, she had improved “a lot”.
They were still running tests, he added, and he was “to meet with the  doc later”.
Gayle and 19-year-old rookie Adrian Barath were the only two recognised opening batsmen chosen for the tour.
The selectors are reportedly considering a replacement of some experience (Lendl Simmons and Devon Smith are the likeliest contenders) but they need to move without delay, whether Gayle is able to return of not.
In the absence of the captain (82 Tests, average 39.58 and ten hundreds), Travis Dowlin was Barath’s partner against Queensland.
It is an unfamiliar position for him. He went in No. 3 in his two Tests against Bangladesh but his usual slot for Guyana is No. 5.
Sarwan did not bat yesterday, Narsingh Deonarine taking his place at No. 3 in West Indies’ second innings.
“The doctors said [Sarwan] has some infection, so it is better for him to stay off the field and not do anything further,” coach David Williams said last night.
Sarwan, veteran of 81 Tests who topscored with 73 in the first innings total of 271, felt it was an allergic reaction and was confident that he would be able to bat on the final day today.
Taylor, who has 81 wickets in his 28 Tests, is also expected to recover in time for the first Test – which starts on Thursday – but is bound to be short of preparation. (TC)
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