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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, June 24, 2001 |
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West Indies thrives on Zimbabwe's disintegration
By Vijay Lokapally
HARARE, JUNE 23. The colour lay in the clothing and the stands.
Not in the game at all. Cricket on the field lacked the flavour
which makes limited- overs competition such a spectacle as the
West Indies completed a comfortable 27-run victory over Zimbabwe
in the opening match of the triangular series here on Saturday.
It was a lovely day for cricket. A noisy crowd and pleasant sun
was a heady combination for the Harare Sports Club to be so well
decked up for the occasion. But then the home team's dressing
room experienced a quiet quake which spared the stands but not
Zimbabwean cricket.
When Grant Flower walked out for the toss, it appeared a good-
charm move. But slowly news filtered that Heath Streak had
stepped down in protest and Guy Whittall too had declined the
position, leaving Zimbabwe with a new captain a few minutes
before the toss.
It was a dark moment for Zimbabwean cricket but one aimed at
highlighting the growing discord between the players and the
administration as Streak became the third captain to quit the
post after Andy Flower and Alistair Campbell. This time the issue
being team selection.
The administrators may have their point to make and so would the
players but this was a move initiated at the wrong time. The
crowd had no clue about the ugly episode but it must have dawned
upon them when Flower directed all the changes on the field, and
not Streak, who was not happy with the team given to him.
The controversy had its impact on the contest as the Zimbabweans
disintegrated as a team and at one point looked a haggard lot
through some uncharacteristic poor fielding. This was not the
Zimbabwean team Streak had raised through years of toil and it
hurt the people in the stands more because the pasting came at
the hands of the West Indies. The locals fancy their chances
immensely against this team which has gone through bad times for
quite some time.
Zimbabwe, electing to field, just played into the hands of the
West Indies, which saw the batting line-up coming to grips with
the conditions. It was not the best of the batting performances
simply because the bowling was undisciplined, with the exceptions
of the past and the current captains - Streak and Grant Flower.
West Indian openers make hay
The opening pair of Chris Gayle and Daren Ganga made good use of
the wayward Zimbabweans even though the spark was missing from
the shots. Steady batsmen both, Gayle and Ganga built their
innings through a sound approach which gave an insight into the
plans the West Indians had for the day.
The idea was clearly to concentrate on the scoring opportunities
that resulted from a poor line adopted by Andy Blignaut. The
openers avoided taking on an accurate Streak but Blignaut and
later Travis Friend sprayed the ball and gave the batsmen enough
time and space to pick boundaries in all corners. The hard work
of Streak had been wasted.
The West Indians had every reason to be proud of the performance.
All their batsmen struck form and importantly it was the manner
in which each realised his role that gave the West Indian victory
greater merit. Brian Lara's absence was not even felt.
The century-plus association between Gayle and Ganga was an ideal
start to the tournament. Gayle was lucky when he was put down in
the slips by Stuart Carlisle off Andy Blignaut but this blemish
apart, the opener was a treat to watch. Ganga matched him with
some fluent strokeplay as the two exploited the Zimbabwean
attack.
Wavell Hinds too made the best use of the situation before he was
run out in a terrible mix-up but Shivnarine Chanderpaul meanwhile
paced his innings in a crafty style. The left-hander from Guyana
was joined by skipper Carl Hooper, who stepped up the tempo with
a few robust shots, a pull for six off Friend being quite savage.
Grant Flower's task was made difficult by some poor bowling by
Friend and Mluleki Nkala. Leg-spinner Brian Murphy did well to
attack and was rewarded with two wickets. The pick of the bowlers
were Streak and Grant Flower.
Zimbabwe needed a bright start but Dion Ebrahim was not up to the
standards. Stuart Carlisle was snapped brilliantly by Hopper from
a firm drive while Grant Flower perished to a cut from a very
cramped position.
The out-of-form Campbell now found the going easy to get some
runs against his name but he was too slow to make a meaningful
impact on the chase. He never looked in a position to dictate the
course of the match and was content to compile a half century,
his 32nd in One-day internationals, which should keep him in good
stead in the forthcoming matches.
Zimbabwe suffered everytime a partnership appeared to be building
up. The Campbell-Blignaut stand may have raised some hopes but it
ended when the latter was sent back on a second run and failed to
beat Cameroon Cuffy's throw. The West Indians sensed a
comfortable victory at this point and shut the opposition out
despite a spirited fifty-run stand between Campbell and Guy
Whittall. Whittall and Campbell holed out to ambitious strokes
after having delayed the inevitable.
Cameroon Cuffy was adjudged `Man of the match' for his tight
bowling at the start of the Zimbabwe innings.
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