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A cold-eyed clinical killer
``Andy Roberts is the finest fast bowler I have ever faced.'' -
Sunil Gavaskar.
THE SUNNY statement says it all. Andy Roberts, who is going to
celebrate his 50th birthday on Jan. 29, was not only a complete
fast bowler but one of the greatest of all- time.
In an era which saw an impressive array of speed merchants,
Roberts had carved a special niche for himself. If Australia
boasted of Dennis Lillee, England of Bob Willis, New Zealand of
Richard Hadlee and Pakistan of Imran Khan in the 1970s, the West
Indies took pride in the first ever Antiguan to play in the
national team.
It was because of Roberts that Clive Lloyd, one of the most
successful captains, could think of relying totally on fast
bowling only for his side success anywhere in the world; in any
wicket, any condition. Lloyd's belief was strengthened with the
arrival and instant success of Michael Holding.
The two were soon joined by Colin Croft and Joel Garner. Roberts,
Holding, Croft and Garner formed such a deadly quartet that Lloyd
never ever required a spinner. They came to be referred to as the
Fearsome Foursome.
It was no coincidence that Roberts always bowled the first over,
no matter who else was in the side, except in India in 1983,
which turned out to be his last Test series. No, it had nothing
to to do with his seniority but everything to do with his
exceptional skills when armed with the cherry.
Lloyd already had some explosive batsmen at his command and so
long as the four were around, and bowling in tandem, a West
Indian win was always a foregone conclusion nine times out of
ten. The Fearsome Foursome made Lloyd's task a lot easier,
whether it was Test cricket or one-day cricket.
One of the reasons why Roberts, Holding, Croft and Garner did not
take 300 Test wickets despite being so talented was that they
invariably shared the spoils among themselves. Unlike Hadlee and
Kapil Dev, who had no support at the other end, who had so many
overs to bowl, the Fearsome Foursome did not have to labour much.
Unlike Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose and all the present-day
West Indian speedsters, who have to bowl marathon spells at
times, Roberts, Holding, Croft and Garner would not get a second
spell in an innings! It is a vital piece of statistics that
Roberts bowled an average of only 39 overs per Test, Croft and
Garner 38 each and Holding ``got off lightly'' with just 35
during their outstanding careers.
Not until he was 16 did Roberts play cricket at all. He was more
interested in studies. In fact, his parents wanted him to study
architecture. Instead, Roberts became an artichect of the
stunning success story of the West Indies.
By no means the usual, spontaneous West Indian fast bowler,
Roberts was a rare combination of fire, settled physique and
mature mind. He was a cold-eyed clinical killer who hammered away
mercilessly at a batsman's weak spot.
Versatility had become synonymous with Roberts the fast bowler.
Besides his brutal pace, ``demoralising'' yorker, vicious late
outswinger and a shrewdly disguised slower ball, what made
Roberts a dangerous customer was his judicious use of bouncers.
The Antiguan, who had studied the mechanics of cricket, could
bowl three different types of bouncers. One was the high bouncing
type. Another one, more dangerous, skidded through and made for
the head. Then there was this `slow' bouncer, dropped short but
was too `slow' for the batsman to hook with confidence. Soon
afterwards would come the high-speed bouncer!
The accusations that Roberts bowled too many bouncers were
certainly not unfounded even though he bowled in an era when
there was no rule like ``only two bouncers per over''. In the
1976 Manchester Test in particular, Roberts and Holding subjected
the aging Brian Close and John Edrich to a ``cruel bombardment''.
Lloyd, who always backed his players to the hilt, defended
Roberts and Holding saying, ``Our bowlers got carried away'', one
of the less laudable remarks made by a fielding captain. He had
used similar tactics against the Indian batsmen, who blunted it
at times, in the previous series in the Caribbean.
Of the two, Holding was apparently intimidating at times. Alan
Gibson, the great English critic, did make this comment in favour
of Roberts: ``I never thought him one of the worst offenders.
Perhaps because he was so very fast his bouncers commanded more
attention than those of others.''
Roberts and Holding, supported by Wayne Daniel and Vanburn
Holder, enjoyed a rewarding tour against the hapless English
batsmen, each taking nearly 30 wickets in the four-Test rubber.
But it was Roberts who was more consistent of all the West Indian
bowlers, considering that Holding had a rich haul of 14 wickets
in a single Test. Holding, who got along well with Roberts, on
and off the field, always regarded the Antiguan as the best of
all fast bowlers he played with or against.
It was in India and Pakistan in 1974-75 that Roberts first showed
the extent of his talent. In the subcontinent he gave a brilliant
exhibition of high quality fast bowling and took more wickets
than anyone else. If anything, Roberts took 32 wickets against
India and won the series 3-2 for his team under the heavy
handicap of being a fast bowler operating on spinner-friendly
pitches.
In Chennai in particular Roberts fired on all cylinders and made
life miserable for all the Indian batsmen save one. When Roberts
ran through the innings and sent the Indians packing for 190 in
the first essay, Gundappa Visvanath was the only batsman to
emerge with his head high. If Roberts displayed fast bowling in
all its glory against heavy odds, Visvanath gave a fine
exhibition of superb batsmanship, paying scant respect to the man
with deadly designs.
It was a classic encounter between a champion fast bowler and a
master batsman and none deserved to lose the battle. At the end
of it all, there was poetic justice, too. While Roberts scalped
seven Indian wickets, Visvanath remained unconquered on 97.
Although the calypso charmers were devastated down under in 1976,
surrendering the rubber 5-1 to Greg Chappell's powerful
Australian side, Roberts was one of the few West Indian players
who had his reputation intact. It was, of course, after this
humiliation, inflicted by Lillee and Jeff Thomson, that Lloyd
vowed to let loose an army of hostile fast bowlers spearheaded by
Roberts. Indian batsmen became their first target, followed by
the Englishmen.
``I will never forget how Andy, when I was well past a hundred,
the ball, 60 overs old, brought so many balls back from way
outside the off stump, literally cutting them viciously over the
middle stump. He followed that with two perfectly pitched leg
cutters in the next over and marvelled at the versatility of the
man,'' said, Sunil Gavaskar, one of the few successful batsmen
against Roberts. ``He made you play almost all the deliveries. 95
per cent of the deliveries he sent down you had to play and that
was the greatness of Andy.''
Roberts was a very reliable batsman down the order. He could
attack savagely (he once hit Ian Botham for four sixes in a Test
over in England in 1980) and he could defend dourly (like in
India in 1983 when he shared a major partnership with Lloyd at
the fag end of a West Indian innings). He had played some short
but sweet innings at crucial junctures. It was Roberts' batting
that won the match from the jaws of defeat against Pakistan in
the 1975 World Cup.Nicknamed ``Fruity'' because of his favourite
drink, orange juice, Roberts neither drank nor smoke. He tended
to be quiet to the point of being withdrawn, even in the dressing
room. Like any West Indian cricketer, Roberts also loved his
music. He had taste for what American novelists used to call
home-spun philosophy.
Liked more by other cricketers than some of his own teammates
because of his ``embarrassingly'' shy nature, Roberts had the
rare honour of being publicly invested with the CBE when the
Queen visited Antigua in 1985.
HARESH PANDYA
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