Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

An interesting article and therefore i decide to share it with guppies…

Lara is only one test short of joining Alec Stewart as Test cricket’s greatest loser. Out of 115 tests he played for WI, he has lost 53 of them…It means that if Pakistan manages to beat WI in both test matches, lara would still be able to achieve another milestone in his career, and boy o boy….what a milestone that would be
“THE GREATEST LOSER EVER”

I just feel sorry for this great player who was really selfish and egoistic too…

http://content.cricinfo.com/columns/content/story/208704.html

Is Lara past his sell-by date?

The life of Brian

John Stern

May 5, 2005

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Troubled times never seem far away for Brian Lara © Getty Images

“He’s not the Messiah, he’s a very naughty boy,” shrieks Terry Jones in Monty Python’s Life of Brian. In Trinidad Brian Lara is the Messiah and nothing anyone says will change that. To many others elsewhere in the Caribbean, he is indeed a very naughty boy.

West Indies can’t live with Lara, they can’t live without him. Was last year’s record-breaking innings in Antigua the worst thing that could have happened to the game in the region, simply papering over the cracks? Or did it restore pride to the islands and Lara’s deserved status as the world’s No. 1 batsman?

And what are we supposed to make of the recent South Africa series? West Indies were bizarrely at their best in Guyana without Lara and the other Cable (& Wireless) guys. When the great man returned, normal service was resumed. He made loads of runs, and his team lost.

Ridley Jacobs called him selfish the other day, not an original refrain but rare coming from such a recently retired player rather than one of the 1980s grandees. Lara’s ability to score runs when he needs them is remarkable. If the team needs them too then that is a happy coincidence, like in the 1998-99 series against Australia. But the 400 not out against England was of no consequence either to the team or the series, only to Lara who had made 97 runs in six innings before that.

But plenty of other batsmen have been called selfish, including Steve Waugh. Batting, particularly at this level, is a selfish business. It’s you against the other bloke and a batsman rarely has the luxury of thinking about something other than not getting out and where his next run is coming from.

What is relevant, though, is whether West Indies would be better off without Lara. The South Africans probably underestimated West Indies in Guyana but even so the way that under-strength side performed begs some very serious questions. They looked like a proper Test team, full of energy and enthusiasm.

Will Kendall, the former Hampshire batsman, wrote in The Wisden Cricketer recently that when Shane Warne first arrived at the county in 2000, the players were too intimidated to reap any benefit from his presence. In time that has changed, and Warne now galvanises Hampshire in a way that Lara has never managed (or perhaps attempted) to galvanise West Indies.

It is possible that the West Indian players, at least the younger ones, are intimidated by his presence. It is rare for a genius like Lara to be self-aware enough to realise how lesser players might feel in his company. Stories abound of England debutants in the 1980s and '90s simply being too scared - or being made to feel that way - to be themselves around their more senior team-mates. So if that can happen in an England dressing-room that wasn’t overflowing with legends, imagine what it must be like to share a locker-room with Lara, or even to bat with him. Might you not speak until spoken to? Might you be a tad self-conscious about the first cover-drive you unleashed?

It is easy to lambast the West Indies players for lack of discipline, as the critics do. But discipline stems from desire, and desire stems from confidence. A player who is not confident and feels constantly under pressure will give off an air of ill-discipline or carelessness.

It is heresy to wish the departure of Brian Lara. He is the batsman I would spend my last dollar to watch. Not Tendulkar or Ponting or anyone else. But West Indies may only move on when Lara is gone.

He has lost 53 of his 115 Tests, and is only one defeat short of joining Alec Stewart as Test cricket’s greatest loser. That is not a record that Lara either wants or deserves.

John Stern is the editor of The Wisden Cricketer

© Cricinfo

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

What was Lara's performance in those 53 Test matches ?

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket’s greatest loser !!!

In the 53 tests that were lost, Lara has an average of 42 (with a high score of 221), compared to his overall career average of 53. Here are the complete statistics.

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket’s greatest loser !!!

What about his average in matches which windies won or were drawn
his average when windies won, 31matches 2751 runs 213 highest 59.80 average 7 centuries 16 fifties

his average when they drew
** 31matches 3235 runs highest400* 73.52 average 10 centuries 9fifities**

Alltogether average in matches which windies didn’t lose
62 matches 5986runs 400 highest 66.51 average 17 centuries 25 fifties*

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

^ so its not Lara who is "Looser" I'd say as when he performed better WI won :D

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

^ So there you go. Hes the only one they have. If he falters, theres no one to back him up.

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

Check this out ..........interesting!

Test centuries against all nations

Steve Waugh was the second person to achieve this feat, after Gary Kirsten of South Africa. Then Sachin Tendulkar joined this very exclusive club last December, completing his set with his undefeated 248 against Bangladesh at Dhaka, and Rahul Dravid joined them in the very next Test, with 160 against Bangladesh at Chittagong. And Sri Lanka's Marvan Atapattu became the fifth member, with 127 against New Zealand at Napier earlier this month. Seven current players are just one short of a full house: Brian Lara, who needs one against Pakistan (who West Indies play soon), **Herschelle Gibbs and Jacques Kallis (both missing Sri Lanka), Adam Gilchrist, Matthew Hayden and Ricky Ponting (all lacking Bangladesh), and **Inzamam-ul-Haq (South Africa). Click here for a list showing how the leading batsmen's Test centuries have been distributed.

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket’s greatest loser !!!

wah jee wah..are you employed by cricinfo also these days …

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

lara is still a class act, a thorough genious for me. he is unfortunate to be on the wrong end of the podium, but dat isn't his fault, he is still performing, scored 2 good ton's against saffies just recently. his team mates need to occupy the crease with him and help him out a bit more then they do. he can't save their rear ends' all the time.

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

No matter what ever u say, he is a great batsman in present days

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

Whats with the WI trying to put all the blame onto Lara. Seriously, its common knowledege, one man cannot change the teams fortunes. Sachin Tendulkar, despite his brilliance during the better part of the 90s, was unable to bring about any good change to the side. It was only when other players like Dravid, Laxman, Ganguly and later Sehwag, Harbhajjan and Co. matured, and India finally started to win series and important matches.

The fault lies with in the WI system. The cultural influence of the United States, the mismanagement in their Cricket Board and so much more. Lara is just the tip of the iceberg. The problems lie deep within their system. Lara is their last great superstar, and probably the most easiest person or object to pinpoint at.

Re: Lara on his way to become the Test cricket's greatest loser !!!

We all know that Australians and English always have problems with anyone perfoming well or making records. They thinki that making or breaking records is only their right and thats why they have atough time digesting performances from people like lara, murli, or any other non-white cricketer. I remember matthew hayden couple of years ago said that asian and westindian cricketers are usually selfish becasue they go for thier personal milestone and don't care about their team. On the other hand we australians never think of personal milestones. Well you have to think different when you are not australian. Being a member of australian team means that you rarely get a chance where the whole team is dependent upon one player and that player has to play a long long innings and at the same time have to keep one end intact. How often we have seen this situation withh rest of the nations and then seldom we see that with australian side. But few months after that sttaement from matthew hayden, he himself broke the world record of 376 runs at that time from lara scring 380 runs. So when lara did it, they had problem with it when hayden did it there was no problem, and now again this cric info report also giving the same message since lara is once again thw world record holder.