Shiv Chanderpaul appears set to be dropped for the Test series against Australia after he was left out of West Indies' 12-member group for a pre-series training camp in Barbados. Chanderpaul could still make it to the Test squad when the final team is decided on May 29, 2015 after the conclusion of the practice match between the Australians and the Board President's XI. The chairman of selectors, Clive Lloyd, however indicated West Indies were keen on looking ahead. "This was a tough decision for the selection panel to make," Lloyd said. "We recognize the significant contribution Chanderpaul has made to the West Indies teams over the last two decades, but we want to take this opportunity to introduce a number of young, promising players into the squad." Chanderpaul is 86 short of equalling Brian Lara's record of highest West Indies run-scorer in Tests. However he would denied that going by what is heard from Clive Lloyd who feels that over the period there is decline in his form. In his last 11 innings, he has averaged only 16 ! – but looking at some of the players in the present squad, his class is unlikely to be matched. Sadly, the West Indies selectors ahve decided their team has a greater chance of beating Australia without Shiv Chanderpaul than with him. For Clive Lloyd, a fellow Guyanese, the decision to jettison a player as respected as Chanderpaul was a difficult one, but ultimately a matter of cricketing logic. In the loose collective of islands that make up the Caribbean it was bound to have created plenty of debate in circles both sporting and political, but Lloyd and the coach Phil Simmons were able to present a united and uncompromising front when explaining their choice of players to face Australia. To the selectors, he is 40 and not in the shape of what he was .... would apply to every player ! Simmons said that while they had considered the possibility of allowing Chanderpaul one final curtain call against Australia, it would not have been for reasons of sentiment. Once the selectors decided to move on, there was no thought of a farewell tour. He is quoted as saying - "It's not about giving someone two Tests to finish their career, it's about picking the right team to play the next game." There are plans in the works for an appropriate acknowledgement of Chanderpaul's career, a journey so long that it commenced in 1994, when Simmons was still part of the Test team and West Indies were still proudly in possession of an unbeaten streak that had begun in 1980. He has been a stubborn customer at the crease and it will be some time before Chanderpaul comes to terms with the decision. That stubbornness was evident in his refusal to concede that his career was on the wane, leaving Lloyd and Simmons with the difficult task of talking him through their judgment. The training squad of 12 assembled in Barbados will be swelled to 14 following the conclusion of the tour match between the Australians and a WICB President's XI in Antigua, in which numerous young hopefuls will attempt to prove themselves worthy of a Test berth. The IPL stars are not part of the squad !!!! Michael Holding, the former West Indies fast bowler, too has backed the chairman of selectors Clive Lloyd's logic of jettisoning Shivnarine Chanderpaul for the Australia series. Holding echoed sentiments - "Chanderpaul has to make way for someone younger. The person that comes in obviously is not going to fill Chanderpaul's shoes immediately. He has done so much good work for West Indies. But it is time for someone younger than him who can grow into those shoes." While Chanderpaul's former team-mate, Brian Lara, criticised the 'despicable' treatment meted out to Chanderpaul and called for a farewell series akin to the one arranged by the BCCI for Sachin Tendulkar, Holding said that he had "no problems" with the way the WICB had dealt with the issue. It appears that Chanderpaul has already played his last International innings. With legends Clive Lloyd, Mike Holding and Phil Simmons explaining, keeping out Chanderpaul might sound logical …… but do read this ~ the West Indies team which in 1980s looked invincible and had battery of pace bowlers [their support fast bowlers of that age, would easily have walked into any other team !!] has slid so rapidly – the Board and their handling of players has much to do in this. Dave Cameron and the WI Board handled the players thoroughly badly leading to their abandoning Indian tour midway in Oct 2014. This March, there were spate of retirements from players who have some more good years left. The 31 year old Lendl Simmons, who took Mumbai Indians to victory in IPL 8 announced his retirement following - Darren Sammy, Dwayne Smith and Darren Bravo. The dropping and the treatment pushed allrounder Kieron Pollard to take an "indefinite break" from first class cricket in Trinidad and Tobago (T&T). Earlier this season, opening batsman Adrian Barath pulled out of the team saying he, too, was taking a break. In March, the star opener Chris Gayle raised the possibility of retiring from Test cricket if his fragile back cannot cope with the increasing workload in a crammed cricket calendar. Sad for Shivnarine Chanderpaul and more so, for the islands of West Indies. With regards – S. Sampathkumar
29th May 2015