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Andy Flower hits century
By G Viswanath
SHARJAH, OCT. 21. There is a downside to Sharjah cricket when one
of the big teams is not in the fray. A game of cricket was being
played on Saturday afternoon in a most leisurely manner before
Andrew Flower stepped in to provide some spark and life into the
match between Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe, whose total of 225 was
almost on par with what the Indians made on Friday.
The elder of the Flower brothers, Andrew, who performs the role
of an efficient wicketkeeper and brings in immense value as an
allrounder, had to make up a lot for the early reversals that saw
Zimbabwe make a hopeless start in its first campaign in the Coca-
Cola Tri-series.
His second century in one-day Internationals even surpassed
Sachin Tendulkar's effort on Friday not only on the count of
quality, but also because of the fact he came to bat after the
fall of two wickets.
The enormous contribution Andy Flower made along with Dirk
Viljoen in the lower order can be gauged from the fact that
Zimbabwe had not only taken the field without Neil Johnson and
Murray Goodwin, but also without Alistair Campbell, serving a one
match suspension because he showed a note of dissent in the ICC
Knockout at Nairobi and Grant Flower, who was presumably dropped
because he has not been in good nick in recent times.
It required some confidence and guts to leave out one of the old
pros in the side, but this is what the Zimbabwe selectors did on
Saturday and included in the eleven a batsman who was their start
batsman in the 1998 under-19 World Cup in South Africa.
Andy Flower lived up to the reputation of a solid and reliable
batsman. His performance has been on the up ever since he gave up
captaincy, a position he was given after Alistair Campbell
vacated four years ago to concentrate on his batting. Andy Flower
has been around for a decade and from the time Zimbabwe began
playing Test match cricket. His wealth of experience was evident
in the near three-hour tenure in the middle. He came in at the
fall of Stuart Carlisle - 13 for two -
and never gave the impression that he was going to chuck his
wicket away. He brought to the fore a nice blend of orthodox and
unorthodox strokes, the latter so conspicuous in the three
reverse hit boundaries, all off off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan.
The former Zimbabwe skipper was able to hold his own because he
has an organised defence and plays cricketing shots. The match
played on the adjacent pitch to the one on which the first match
was played appeared to be marginally superior. He began stepping
out to hit Kaushaliya Weeraratne to the mid-wicket fence, but the
stroke of the day was his straight drive off the same bowler.
Zimbabwe needed the precise skills of Andy Flower for a counter
attack after the Sri Lankans had made good inroads in the first
hour after opting to field. Excess moisture on the outfield must
have weighed heavily on Sanath Jayasuriya's mind before he took
the decision to field.
The Indians had informed the Match Referee Denis Lindsay about
the wet conditions on the outfield.
He told the Indian team management on Saturday morning that the
conditions were the same for all the three teams and that the
organisers would make special efforts to reduce moisture content
on the outfield.
The Zimbabwe opener Douglas Marillier began with a rasping square
hit off Chaminda Vaas, but thereafter he and debutant Mark
Vermeulen failed to beat the strong off-side field. The harder
they struck the ball, the straighter it went to the fielder.
Marillier was a trifle unlucky to be given out, when the bowler
Nuwan Zoysa and Romesh Kaluwitharana appealed for a leg- side
catch. The ball appeared to have deflected off Marillier's pads
before the wicketkeeper held the ball.
Marvan Atapattu who spilled a catch at cover, made up for the
lapse quickly when he fired a direct hit to run out Carlisle. The
third-wicket pair in Vermeulen and Andrew Flower strove to
stabilise the Zimbabwe innings. Even as it appeared that the
third-wicket pair had warded off imminent danger, Jayasuriya
plucked the ball in the air at widish mid-off that terminated the
innings of Vermeulen.
Zimbabwe suffered another blow when Muralitharan forced Guy
Whittal to hit back at him straight. Jayasuriya's decision to
field was vindicated.
But from here on Andy Flower and Viljoen fought a grim battle for
survival, rescued their side from a palpable slide.
The onset of the slog overs saw Andy Flower carve his second
century and Viljoen smashing three sixes off Russel Arnold in the
49th over. Andy Flower had picked Muralitharan in his ninth over,
stepping out to send the ball over cover and excelling in the
reverse hits.
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