The toughest part is keeping your eyes open
by Neil Manthorp 04/04/2001, 00:00
Deborah Kirsten is honest enough to admit that her interest in watching cricket is restricted to '...the one-dayers, definitely, and Test cricket, when Gary is batting...or when it's exciting!'
With all but three members of the squad in
Antigua now partnered by wives and
girlfriends, there are quite a few more ladies whose
interest in the game
has had to be 'manufactured' because of the job their
partners have.
Isabelle Klusener is another who genuinely enjoys
watching the cricket and also states a preference for the one-day game
(which is understandable
given her husband's job description) but six straight
hours of Test cricket
is above and beyond the call of duty.
Debbie Kirsten has, for some reason, become a very
informal 'moral'
guide for the other ladies as to how much cricket they
'need' to watch in
order to be seen as 'dutiful'. So at each cricket
ground, when the wives are
on tour, the VIP box set aside for them is usually
empty for part of either the
morning session of a Test match or the late afternoon one.
"We all do our own thing, obviously, but there's
usually a group of us
who end up doing a bit of shopping or exploring in the
morning before going
to the cricket in the afternoon. Or we go to the
cricket in the morning and
then the beach in the afternoon!" Debbie says with a
grin. Nobody, but
nobody, needs to feel guilty about going to the beach
in Barbados or
Antigua!
Cricket is an acquired taste, no doubt about that,
and one that poor Constance Hooper, wife of Carl, is still struggling to attain. On the
flight from Barbados
to Antigua I sat next to her and Carl junior (who is
quite a handful).
An English tourist sitting opposite
Hooper caught hold of
young Carl as he leapt once again into the aisle and
enquired from the
apparently single Mum (Carl and the entire West Indies
team were sitting a
little further behind) where she was travelling and
whether she was alone.
"We're getting off in Antigua for the cricket -
I'm Mrs Hooper," she
said, smiling.
"Oh, is there some cricket in Antigua? - that's
nice. I'm Bill
Braithwaite...I'm afraid I don't follow the cricket
much. Does your husband
like watching as well?"
"Umm, well, he sort of has to watch," explained
Constance. "He's the
captain..."
"Oh, wasn't there some sort of controversy over
that?" asked Bill,
tactfully.
"Well, yes. He retired in 1999 and then he came
back as captain, so
yes..."
"Still, I'm not bothered with cricket," Bill
concluded.
"Neither would I be if I wasn't married to the
captain of the West
Indies," Constance concluded with a grimace.
And the moral of the story is: next time you see
the wives and
girlfriends sitting together in their VIP box at the
Recreation Ground in
Antigua, don't think their life is easy. Some of them
are working bloody
hard to keep their eyes open and look interested.