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West Indies may seek psychologist's help
PERTH, DEC. 5. The beleaguered West Indies cricket team is still
considering using a sports psychologist to lift morale before the
third Test, which starts on December 15 in Adelaide.
But no decision has been made only 10 days out from the crucial
match in which a further Australian win, after victories in the
first two Tests in Brisbane and Perth, would seal the series.
Tour manager Ricky Skerritt, on Tuesday, scotched stories quoting
captain Jimmy Adams as saying a formal request for a motivator
had been sent to the West Indies Cricket Board.
Skerritt said he had contacted a Perth sports psychologist, Dr.
Neil McLean, who was now overseas and returning on Wednesday.
``He was generous to me with his thoughts and his expertise in
this area, but we have not made a decision to use him, nor has he
made himself available at this stage,'' Skerritt said.
``I will talk with him again. He has given me what you could call
a friendly consultation on the role of a sports psychologist, and
whether or not introducing one to this squad at this point is
going to make a big improvement.
``No final decision has been made, no request has been put
forward to the West Indies board.
``Within the team, we are able to bring in short-term consultants
without having approval from the board.''
Skerritt said he had no doubt players could benefit from advice
from a psychologist.
``There is no question about that-it is more a matter of where
you start,'' he said.
``We don't have a development base with mental skills training,
as you have in Australia.
``A lot of your players have been getting specific mental skills
training since the age of 14 or younger, so when they are at Test
level they understand what a sports psychologist does, they
understand the benefit of having someone for even short periods.
``So it is more a matter of fine-tuning and reaffirmation of
certain principles they have adapted.
``Our players do not have any history of that, so it has to be
done on an individual basis as well as a group basis.''
On the injury front, several players, apart from accomplished
batsman, Shivnarine Chanderpaul-who has been sidelined for up to
another month-have injury problems.
Fast bowler Mervyn Dillon, who trod on a stray bottle on the
field in the first Test in Brisbane, has a bruised bone in his
left heal. He has been ruled out of Thursday's match between the
tourists and the Prime Minister's X1 in Canberra.
Leg-spinner Mahendra Nagamootoo has twisted an ankle during
training and is receiving treatment.The good news for the
tourists is that 20-year-old fast bowler Kerry Jeremy, who broke
his jaw in the side's opening first-class game in Perth almost a
month ago, has been given a fully-fit rating by the surgeon who
operated on the injury.
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