...behind a legacy deeply mired in contradictions... a natural flair... 400 in a Test, 501 in first-class cricket... and yet, on many occasions, a selfish autocrat... never a team-player...
One look at the sky, one gaze at the non striker and that heartrending final trudge back to the pavilion.
Just as he was about to disappear for the final time into the safe haven of the dressing room, home for 17 long years, he decided to stop. Bat and hands aloft, he waved at the crowd, which had gathered inthrongs to pay homage to him.
A match of little meaning had been transformed by one man into the match of the tournament. Lara may have failed to lead his team into the semi-finals but he had surely made the world cup for the organizers.
Just about everybody stood up to bid him farewell. Nasser Hussain, sitting next to me at the media enclosure, was clapping in admiration. Everyone was. And the local fans had gone berserk. Lara songscame on again, the drumming started and the ground was buzzing. The only difference was that this was a celebration of pathos, a lament that the icon had finally finished his breathtaking journey.
It was my closest encounter with the man who has given us, cricket aficionados from across the world, unparalleled joy for more than a decade and a half. Seeing him at such close proximity, I was tempted to just go and feel those hands thatcan -- or should I now say, could -- with one flourish, dispatch a Danish Kaneria googly over the square cover fence, keep Glen McGrath at bay and single-handedly win a Test match for the West Indies against Australia, scoring 153 not out and snub Muralitharan in a manner he has never been in his cricketing career. For the record, the same Kaneria had a couple of months before mesmerized Tendulkar and Co. at Banglore.
Any documentary on India West Indies cricket had to have an episode on Lara. And who best to talk about the conqueror than theconquered' As Pakistan was practicing a couple of mornings later at the Sabina Park in Jamaica , the venue of the second and last Test of the series, we went and caught up with Kaneria. Posing the question that has now been posed a million times over, we got an emphatic answer from a non-effusive person.Here's a translation of what Kaneria told us in Hindi: "Lara is far better than Sachin. Soon after he came out to bat at Bridgetown , I started bowling googlies to him. It was apparent that hewasn't reading the ball well and I was confident that I could clean him up quickly. However, he soon started stepping out to me and in no time did I see myself being taken off by the captain. What had transpired in the meantime was that Lara had destroyed my figures. I simply could not believe how one could lift the turning ball inside out over square cover for six."
I was in Barbados to do a few interviews, general routine stuff to be used as world cup build up for the Indian television channel Times Now. And one of the questions I was briefed to ask former West Indian players was how they rated Lara as skipper.Here's a snapshot into some of the conversations:
Carlisle Best: "Lara's legacy can never be like Viv's. Lara is a great batsman, but he is not a good skipper. The team is not often a team under him."
David Allan: "When compared to Worrell and Sobers, Lara's will be a flawed legacy. Idon't know what is wrong with West Indies cricket because I am not in the dressing room. But something I do know is that something is wrong, seriously wrong."
What the Kaneria interaction and the Best and Allan opinions demonstrate is that Brian Lara is'complex' almost impossible to unravel. On the one hand, he is the last of West Indies cricketers to have treated cricket as a means of liberation. How else can we describe his determination to win back the record for the highest Test score from MathewHayden' Lara's cricketing flair was the last remaining vestige of black resurgence amidst superior Western power hitting. Post Lara, the West Indies team will be a bunch of competitive mediocres. On the other hand, the liberator was on many occasions a selfishautocrat. Had he declared, rather than trying to score 400, West Indies may have won that Test match against England in Antigua.
Trying to deconstruct his penultimate press conference too is an arduous task. A mundane press meet had suddenly turned controversial when Lara announced his decision to quit international cricket. The penchant for drama, yet another Lara trait, was at the root of this. Mark his last words at the briefing: "I will not take any more questions after this. I gave extensive consideration to this. I want everybody to know that on Saturday I'll be playing my last international match. I've already spoken to the board and the players about this." Having said that he got up to leave. And knowing full well that stunned TV reporters would queue up for one exclusive quote in front of the stairs coming out of the Gary Sobers pavilion, he walked out of the stairs at the back and disappeared.
As one young Indian journalist suggested, "He is very clever. He will not come out because he knows we are waiting." That is what Lara is. A man to never shy away from challenges, but one who is a challenge to himself and to the rest of the world. Andthe world cricket is in mourning because the challenge has finally come to an end.