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The man who tamed the West Indies’ great four-pronged pace attack
Andy Roberts
Columns
Garfield Robinson  
April 6, 2022

The man who tamed the West Indies’ great four-pronged pace attack

In 1983 the West Indies pace quartet was at its pinnacle. Few hoped to survive against them, and fewer still had the audacity to confront them head-on and fight fire with fire.

The thought of facing Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Malcolm Marshall, and Joel Garner filled otherwise competent batsmen with dread, and quite a few, it is said, were excused from the firing line by the sudden onset of previously unreported illnesses or injuries.

And before such players are scoffed at or ridiculed, it should be remembered that the West Indian speed merchants posed serious, sometimes life-altering threats, to those at the other end. The instances are countless: In 1976, for example, the plucky Brian Close, recalled at age 45 to face the Caribbean pace battery, was battered and bruised all over (he had the marks to prove it) by a frightening short-pitched assault from Holding, Roberts, and Wayne Daniel that caused many to cringe.

More consequential was the curtailment of England opener Andy Lloyd’s Test match batting career to just 33 minutes in 1984. Struck on the right temple by a screaming Malcolm Marshall bouncer, Lloyd was out like a light, falling motionless on the pitch. Hospitalised for several days, he didn’t play cricket again until 1985, and was left with permanent vision impairment, never regaining the kind of form that would warrant a Test recall.

Not only could the West Indies’ pace attack take your wicket, but you could also be badly injured as well.

Mohinder Amarnath suffered more than his fair share of pain from fast bowlers. He was perceived to have a weakness against the short ball, and the many times he was floored by bouncers give some credence to this perception. Richard Hadlee, Rodney Hogg, Imran Khan, and even hardly known Australian pacer Sam Gannon were just some of the bowlers who counted hits on the Indian batsman.

Yet, despite his problems with short-pitched bowling, he never took a backward step. You could question his technique against hot pace, but there was no doubting his courage.

In 1976, during that famous game when India’s second innings closed on 97 with five batsmen absent due to injuries, Amarnath made an unbelievable 60, with seven fours and three sixes on a terrifying Sabina Park strip. Captain Bishen Bedi had declared with the first innings at 6/306 out of fear of injury to his bowlers, having had three batsmen already hospitalised.

Reporting on the game, West Indian cricket journalist, the late Tony Cozier, wrote: “Holding especially was a frightening proposition, bowling at great pace and persistently threatening the batsman’s life and limb with disconcerting lift. He removed Mohinder Amarnath — for 39 in the first innings — off his fifth delivery with the second new ball. It flew from no more than three yards in front of the batsman, straight at his throat.” And so to have put on such a display in the second innings is a good indication of Amarnath’s fearlessness.

It was a career of peaks and valleys for Amarnath.

Shortly before the 1982/83 West Indies tour he made his fourth comeback to the Indian team. He had sought the counsel of his father, the legendary Lala Amarnath, and the consultation resulted in a noticeable change in technique. To counter his inadequacy against the short ball he adopted a ‘two-eyed’ stance that saw him facing the bowler more square-on, which enabled him to get into position more quickly for his beloved hook shot.

The new approach reaped immediate dividends. In six Tests against Pakistan he amassed 584 runs at 73, with three hundreds and three half-centuries. It was then on to the West Indies to face the lion in its den.

Batting at number three, he made 29 and 40 at Sabina Park, and saw his side go down to an unexpected, heartbreakingg defeat in the last over of the match.

The second Test at the Queen’s Park Oval was drawn, and Amarnath’s 58 and 117 were top scores in both innings, earning him the Man-of-the-Match award.

Rain allowed just over 221 overs at Bourda in Guyana, and Amarnath only made 13 before he was caught by Viv Richards off Marshall in his only turn at the crease.

West Indies won easily on the Caribbean’s quickest surface at the Kensington Oval, Barbados. But the hosts had to contend with a pugnacious Mohinder Amarnath. He made a blistering 91 out of India’s 209 in the first innings, striking six fours and three sixes. Always willing to hook, he was never slow to drive off the front foot whenever the bowlers pitched up.

There was drama aplenty in India’s second innings.

Amarnath had to retire hurt on 18 after being struck a fearful blow on the chin by Marshall. The score was then 1/91, and the batsman had to be transported to hospital, where he received six stitches. He then returned to the dressing room, washed the bloodstains from his shirt, and rejoined the action at the fall of the fifth wicket with the score on 135.

Greeted immediately with a bouncer from Holding, he hooked it almost off the tip of his nose for six — or so the legend goes (the records show only 12 fours in his second innings knock). He went on to make 80, and was hooking until the end.

The teams then travelled to the Antigua Recreation Ground, where he gave another sterling display, making 54 in the first innings and signing off with a majestic 116, which means he left the Caribbean with 594 runs at 66.44, with two centuries and four half-centuries.

Later that year in England, Amarnath was instrumental in India winning the World Cup, earning Man-of-the-Match awards in the semi-final and final.

He still had to endure further peaks and valleys in his career and understandably he — and many others who thought he was treated unfairly — didn’t see eye to eye with the selectors. And remembering what he did to the most fearsome bowling attack of the time — maybe of all time — who could blame them?

Nobody in the era of the four-pronged attack had gone to the Caribbean and played in such a forthright manner. West Indian fans were used to seeing opposing batsmen duck and cower in the face of the usually searing onslaught. But Amarnath stood tall with his lucky red rag in his back pocket and hooked. He was never intimidated and never backed down. It was a performance that earned him the respect of every cricket fan in the West Indies.

Garfield Robinson is a Jamaican living in the US who writes on cricket for a few Indian and English publications. Send comments to the Jamaica Observer or garfield.v.robinson@gmail.com.

Michael Holding
Malcolm Marshall
Joel Garner
Mohinder Amarnath
Garfield Robinson

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