"The players must take a close look at themselves as they were well prepared and well warned of what to expect from Livingston," Hegarty said.The kick-off between First Division Greenock Morton Dundee was delayed by an electrical fault and the lights went out again for the Premier side as Morton won 2-1.In the day's Nationwide action, Watford lost 2-0 at home to West Bromwich Albion as Denis Smith's side closed in on a First Division play-off place. And Preston North End went to the top of the Second Division after a 1- 0 win at Chesterfield, Ryan Kidd netting.. BRIAN LARA'S world, never stable since it was turned upside down by his phenomenal record-breaking feats in 1994, has come closer to terminal collapse in the past week. Built around the West Indies captaincy he has coveted since he was a boy and to which he was appointed a year ago amidst a welter of controversy, it was utterly undermined last Monday when he presided over the first 5-0 drubbing the West Indies had ever endured. That it should have been against a South African team of a complexion that made the term "whitewash" particularly appropriate and in a town once known as Verwoerdburg heightened the pain both for West Indians who had fought so long against apartheid and for non-white South Africans who had looked on Lara and his great predecessors as role models.For Lara, it was doubly embarrassing.
Four years ago, after the West Indies had been beaten by Kenya in a stunning upset, he created a furore when a journalist with a concealed recorder published his comment that he didn't mind losing to black Africans but that it was "a different matter" losing to white South Africans "We can't stand losing to them," he said. The white South African press haven't let him forget it.Always a magnanimous sportsman, whatever his faults, Lara was gracious in defeat. "We were thoroughly destroyed by a much better team in all departments," he said. "We must try as much as possible to learn from them." But his body language, batting form (he averaged 31 in the five Tests and has now gone 13 Tests without a hundred) and frank revelations revealed a troubled captain of a troubled team.They would have been carefully noted by the West Indies Cricket Board, who meet on 23 February to review the disastrous tour and to plan for the imminent home confrontation against Australia, even tougher opponents. Several Board representatives had reservations about elevating Lara to the captaincy over Courtney Walsh, given Lara's chequered disciplinary record. All had to suffer the humiliation of having to reinstate him after they had dismissed him before the players' strike that jeopardised the tour and so are unlikely to have much sympathy now.For the past 12 weeks, as the West Indies team went from one defeat to another, stories of rifts in the camp, the captain's indifference, the lack of spirit and much else besides flew back to the Caribbean. Initially, and predictably, denied by manager Clive Lloyd, many were later confirmed by Lara "The unity needs to be much better," he said.
"As a team, I'd prefer to have guys tight together off the field and things would work better on the field. Hopefully, things will improve in those areas."It was a unity Lara did not obviously go out of his way to foster. He was seldom seen in the company of his players away from the cricket grounds, indulging a passion for golf that few of his team-mates share and, on the field, the ready smile and the Viv Richards swagger that were his hallmarks were absent. Instead, his posture was of a remote man, arms folded across his chest, rarely animated. It was a different captain to the Lara of his first series at the helm when England were beaten 3- 1 in the Tests and 4-1 in the one-day internationals in the Caribbean. He acknowledged that it is easier to maintain team spirit at home rather than on tour."You've got to remember we're all from different islands and slightly different backgrounds," he said, ignoring the fact that his outstanding predecessors such as Sir Frank Worrell and his present manager, Clive Lloyd, overcame such obstacles to build great teams."In the Caribbean, you get together for seven days to play a Test and then you head back to your different islands," he noted.