
Pakistan's sixth tour of the West Indies was their shortest and most successful,
a month-long swing through four islands that started with a clean sweep of
the three one-day internationals and concluded with a comprehensive victory
in the second of the two Tests to square the series.
Pakistan failed to end their record of never having won a Test series in
the Caribbean. But although this latest instalment of the 47-year-old rivalry
lacked the consistent quality of bygone duels between the likes of Clive
Lloyd and Imran Khan, two talented but chronically inconsistent sides made
it dangerous to look away from the action for fear of missing an exhibition
of awe-inspiring brilliance or bewildering lunacy, often within a few minutes
of each other. Pakistan, bolstered by their resurgence in India a few weeks
earlier, arrived expecting to get the better of a team still in the throes of
internal turmoil caused by the long-running contractual wrangles involving
Digicel, the new sponsors, and their predecessors Cable & Wireless. That
dispute cost Brian Lara the captaincy, which passed to the unassuming
Shivnarine Chanderpaul, and the team's confidence had been further eroded
after they surrendered both the Test and one-day series to South Africa in
the first part of the Caribbean season. This followed the sound beatings from
Australia and England in the previous two home seasons.
The supporters voted with their feet. After Pakistan's 3-0 success in the
one-dayers, where the greater experience of Inzamam-ul-Haq's team held
sway in the few key moments of some generally undistinguished matches,
attendances at the Tests in Barbados and Jamaica were poor. It was a
statement of disillusionment and outright disgust with the state of West
Indian cricket.
The combined all-round talents of Shahid Afridi and Abdul Razzaq were
vital elements in Pakistan's one-day victories in St Vincent and St Lucia,
and they hardly appeared to be missing the tearaway fast bowler Shoaib
Akhtar, who had been omitted from the squad, supposedly on fitness grounds
(although Inzamam may have given the game away when he talked of his
being a disruptive influence).
Yet his absence, and that of Mohammad Sami who really was injured,
left Inzamam relying heavily on Danish Kaneria and Shabbir Ahmed. They
rose to the challenge. Despite growing disquiet about his bowling action -
it still raised eyebrows despite recent remodelling, and he was reported to
the ICC again after the First Test - Shabbir claimed 13 wickets in the two
Tests with a combination of sharp pace and steep bounce, while Kaneria
bowled his side to victory at Sabina Park with a mesmerising display of
wrist-spin, the quality of which few of his opponents would have encountered
anywhere - certainly not at home, where spin is a dying, discouraged art.
One who did come to terms with Kaneria, dishing out some fearful
punishment, was Lara. Relishing the challenge of taking on a quality spinner,
he produced two superbly crafted hundreds in the first innings of both Tests.
But on a gloomy fourth afternoon at Sabina Park, Kaneria snaffled him for
a duck and effectively settled the match.
Chanderpaul remained devoid of the charisma and magnetism of his
predecessor as captain, but was nevertheless full of steely commitment. His
innings of 92 and 153 not out in the First Test went a long way towards
finally earning him a victory as West Indies' captain. Pakistan were very
depleted and distracted for that opening Test, when Inzamam was banned
and a dressing-room row between Afridi and Younis Khan, the stand-in
captain, distracted the team from their primary task. The strong leadership
needed to stabilise Pakistan's loose cannons resurfaced in Jamaica, where
Inzamam's half-century and unbeaten 117 underlined his immense value to
a mercurial team.
The same could be said of Lara and Chanderpaul for West Indies, but
their bowlers also have to deliver. In this Test series two of them did: even
at their best they still rely on match-winning bowlers to ignite hopes of a
Caribbean resurgence somewhere down the line. Fidel Edwards's secondday
burst in Barbados paved the way for a crushing victory, while Corey
Collymore's 11-wicket haul despite defeat in Jamaica was the reward for
discipline and persistence.
Yet the obsession with pace - the legacy of a history replete with great
fast-bowling deeds - leaves West Indies looking one-dimensional and out
of step with the demands of the modern game, a blinkered view that is
occasionally exposed in all its stubborn inadequacy when guileful bowlers
like Kaneria do the damage for the opposition.
Match reports for
1st ODI: West Indies v Pakistan at Kingstown, May 18, 2005
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Report |
Scorecard
2nd ODI: West Indies v Pakistan at Gros Islet, May 21, 2005
Report |
Report |
Scorecard
3rd ODI: West Indies v Pakistan at Gros Islet, May 22, 2005
Report |
Report |
Scorecard
1st Test: West Indies v Pakistan at Bridgetown, May 26-29, 2005
Report |
Report |
Scorecard
2nd Test: West Indies v Pakistan at Kingston, Jun 3-7, 2005
Report |
Report |
Scorecard
© John Wisden & Co Ltd.
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