“In time, we will see benefits”- Lara hopes to use performance mentor role to help West Indies compete with world’s best once again

By Sports Desk March 10, 2023
Brian Lara speaking to current West Indies all-rounder Kyle Mayers. Brian Lara speaking to current West Indies all-rounder Kyle Mayers.

Brian Lara is the greatest batsman the West Indies has ever produced. The 53-year-old Trinidadian terrorized bowling attacks all around the world from 1990 all the way to his last game for the regional side against England in the 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup.

During that span, Lara scored 11,953 runs in 131 Tests at an average of 52.88 including 34 hundreds and 48 fifties, the biggest of those hundreds coming at the Antigua Recreation Ground against England in 2004 when he scored a world record 400*.

His ODI numbers were equally impressive as he scored 10,405 runs in 299 matches at an average of 40.48 with 19 hundreds and 63 fifties.

Now, Lara hopes to give back to West Indies cricket as a member of the support staff of the senior Men’s team.

Before the team’s ongoing Test series against South Africa, Lara joined the coaching staff as a performance mentor.

Lara described the feeling of wearing the West Indies colors again in an interview with Cricket West Indies on Thursday.

“These are the colors that made me who I am today. It’s a different set of emotions. I remember several years back when I was a youngster living out my dream spending 17 years plying my trade in these very colors,” he said.

“Now, it’s a bit different being a member of staff, looking at present day players and trying to implement a style of play and a philosophy of the game that was successful in the past. I feel that, in time, we will see the benefits of this,” he added.

The former West Indies captain also described what his role will be with the team moving forward.

“I think it’s pretty simple. We have to improve our performances and not just sporadically, we have got to do it on a consistent level and I’m not going to pretty it up. That is what I’m here to do as a performance mentor; to get the players to play better cricket more consistently and to get the West Indies back competitive with the best cricket playing countries in the world,” Lara said.

 

 

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