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Truly deserved, Dr Shiv Chanderpaul
ShivnarineChanderpaul'sthe crowd in anEnglish CountyChampionshipgame. (Photo:Randy R Brooks)
Columns
Albert Baldeo  
August 9, 2018

Truly deserved, Dr Shiv Chanderpaul

Guyanese cricket legend Shivnarine Chanderpaul, a former captain of the West Indies team, will be awarded the Honorary Doctors of Law later this year by The University of the West Indies. It is a deserving appreciation for an unsung hero who was denied the chance to become the leading Test scorer in West Indies cricket and “forced to retire”.

His career was unceremoniously derailed by Dave Cameron’s and the West Indies Cricket Board’s whimsical and spiteful actions. The left-handed batsman scored 11,867 runs at an average of 51, with 30 centuries in an illustrious career of 164 Tests to end at the second place in the list of all-time West Indies run-scorers — 86 runs short of legendary Brian Lara with 11,953 runs.

After all, this was the man who personified longevity and tenacity and survived while 519 Test batsmen perished at the other end And, while sharing a record 771 different partnerships in Tests, his performances have been worthy world records that speak volumes about his durability and dependability.

Rahul Dravid, the Indian Wall, is next, but quite some distance behind at 453 Test dismissals at the other wicket, and 738 partnerships.

Yet, Chanderpaul has rarely been given deserving accolades, like Dravid and Tendulkar. “That guy with the most Test matches for the West Indies, playing for over 20 years, I don’t think people in the West Indies understand exactly his contribution,” the great Brian Lara acknowledges, reminding us that Shiv was instrumental in his many batting feats and felt his compatriot deserved to go past his record for the most Test runs by a West Indian.

Many cricket connoisseurs have told me that if their lives depended on the professional application and dedication of a batsman to combat, weather the best bowling, and keep his wicket intact, they would choose Shiv Chanderpaul unhesitatingly.

Indeed, he famously faced 1,051 deliveries against India in 2002 without being dismissed, batting for 1,513 minutes. He was the consummate professional, blessed with the heart of a lion. Brett Lee knocked him out cold where he “could not feel anything, and could not stand or move any limb” with a fast, vicious bouncer, yet Chanderpaul refused the stretcher and was up and running in a few minutes. He even went on to score a brave century. Such was his dedication to his craft, that he is the only international batsman I know who used dark stickers below his eyes, as anti-glare patches used to reduce light entering the peripheral area of the eyes so that he could bat and field without being affected by the sun’s glare. Such attention to minute detail in his improvement and comfort as a cricketer defines the man appropriately called “Tiger”.

Shiv has been the rock and anchor of the West Indies since 1994 — an unlikely, yet worthy Atlas, and has been one of the Caribbean’s most accomplished, yet unsung heroes.

Chanderpaul’s first Test century came in his 19th match — a testimony to his application and determination after scoring as many as 15 half-centuries in the previous 18 matches. He spent most of the initial phase of his career under the shadows of the legendary Lara, and became a lone warrior after Lara’s and Sarwan’s retirements. His batting stance has been described as being ‘crab-like’ and ugly to watch, but those who tolerate this degrading and unfair assessment palpably fail to appreciate that he honed his technique to make the very best of what God gave him, and made up for deficits overwhelmingly in other areas.

It is this single-minded dedication and adaptability that made him the champion and master he is today. Shiv did not have the genius of Rohan Kanhai, the power of Clive Lloyd, the dominance of Roy Fredericks, the technique of Alvin Kallicharran, or the finesse of Carl Hooper or Ramnaresh Sarwan, but the statistical achievements he accumulated that determines how a batsman is measured — runs, centuries, averages surpassed theirs, and one cannot deny his status amongst the greats of the game.

Those who are critical of his doggedness fail to appreciate that he was often the lone warrior in many lost causes at a time when West Indian cricket sank to unfathomable depths and responsibility forced him to eschew glamour and style for dependability and audacity for attrition. Like all the great players, the breadth and depth of his achievements provide sound rebuttals, considering that Chanderpaul has the record for the fourth-fastest Test century — off just 67 balls against the worthy visiting Australians in 2002. In 2008, he hit a four and a six against the bowling of Chaminda Vaas, with 10 needed off two balls to win a One-Day International (ODI) against Sri Lanka.

He also created history with Sarwan when they combined to help West Indies chase down a 418-run target at Antigua in 2003 against Australia, scoring 105 and 104 runs each. He was named the captain of the team to face the visiting South Africans in 2005 and celebrated it by becoming only the second player to make a double century on debut as a Test captain, scoring an unbeaten 200 in Guyana.

Another absolutely stunning record Chanderpaul holds is that of being stumped for the first time after having batted in 266 innings and has batted with as many as 82 different Test partners.

When I interviewed him about the reason for his longevity and success, he told me that, “I have an immense skill and unique gift – concentration, a divine gift bestowed by Lord Shiva.” Ian Bishop, now an international cricket commentator, said it best, in tribute to Chanderpaul, 2008 Wisden Cricketer of the Year: “I played several Test series with him (Shiv), and have seen more esteemed teammates shrink in the face of the fastest bowling, but never Chanderpaul…That no other West Indian managed a score of more than 60 in the Tests speaks of the yawning gap between his skill, commitment and experience — and theirs.”

albaldeo@aol.com

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