West Indies lose 'Chanders' (26 February 1999)
Already shaken by the heated debate over Brian Lara's probational reappointment as captain for the series against Australia and Carl Hooper's long-distance uncertainty, the West Indies had to deal with another piece of unsettling news yesterday
26-Feb-1999
26 February 1999
West Indies lose 'Chanders'
Tony Cozier in Bridgetown
Already shaken by the heated debate over Brian Lara's probational
reappointment as captain for the series against Australia and Carl
Hooper's long-distance uncertainty, the West Indies had to deal with
another piece of unsettling news yesterday.
Shivnarine Chanderpaul, so often the sheet-anchor of the unstable
batting, has been told his right shoulder, injured in a fall while
fielding in the fourth One-day International in South Africa, requires
two more weeks treatment. In other, disheartening words, he is out of
the First Test, starting at the Queen's Park Oval today week.
Monica Benn, the chief physiotherapist at Prashad Hospital in
Georgetown who is treating Chanderpaul, presented the report on the
left-handed batsman's situation to Guyana Cricket Board president
Chetram Singh yesterday.
Singh said he had updated the selectors on Chanderpaul's progress.
They had asked for an opinion as to whether he would be available or
not and that had now been submitted.
Benn said Chanderpaul had sustained "a slight dislocation" that had
not been detected in South Africa. He continued to play in discomfort
and further aggravated the damage by tearing ligaments. "There is
still some inflammation that needs to be cleared up," she said. "Right
now, he finds difficulty in raising his arm above the horizontal and
it is best that he hold off for another two weeks to ensure that it is
fully healed".
That would be in time for Chanderpaul to play in the Second Test,
starting at Sabina Park in Kingston, March 13.
Benn said that, in addition to daily treatment, Chanderpaul was also
working out daily, jogging between two and three miles and working on
his conditioning, toning, flexibility and strength in the gym with
training in the gym.
Describing him as "a very disciplined young man", she added: "All of
this will help the healing process and help him to get strong. He
could also put on some weight and he needs that as a physically
demanding international sportsman."
She pointed out that it would be imprudent for Chanderpaul to return
to play too quickly. "He shouldn't rush things before he's ready,"
she said. "There's a lot of cricket ahead and that shoulder should be
100 per cent recovered to cope with it."
Benn, a specialist in sports medicine, said she suspected a more
serious injury from watching Chanderpaul's movements in South Africa
on television.
"You could see he didn't have proper control swinging the bat," she
observed. "But they didn't diagnose a dislocation in South Africa and
he did more damage by playing on."
Chanderpaul's absence will be keenly felt, in the batting and the
fielding. His consistency in 35 Tests is confirmed by an average of 42
and 19 scores over 50, if only two hundreds. In addition, he was the
only West Indian fielder to bear comparison with the fast, athletic
South Africans.
Contenders as a replacement-or replacements, plural, should Hooper
also be missing-will all be on view this weekend in the Busta Cup
semifinal between Barbados and Jamaica at Kensington Oval and the
Australians' match against the President's XI at Guaracara Park.
The battle-hardened candidates are three captains-the left-handers
Jimmy Adams, the Jamaica captain, and Keith Arthurton, the Nevisian
chosen to lead the President's XI, both with 33 Tests, and the
right-handed Roland Holder, the Barbados captain (10 Tests).
Dave Joseph, the heavy-set 29-year-old Antiguan right-hander in his
10th season of regional cricket, has a further chance to advance his
claims to his first Test cap at Guaracara.
If his first-class average is a modest 35, he has two Busta Cup
hundreds to his name this season and will not be daunted by the
challenge. When the Australians were last in the Caribbean in 1995, he
took 83 off bowling that included the two main men, Glenn McGrath and
Shane Warne.
He will have to act quickly, however. The squad for the Test was
originally scheduled to be picked on Monday but, for some unexplained
reason and according to reports from Trinidad yesterday, it is now
expected to be named at a media conference at the Trinidad Hilton
tomorrow night.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)