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Christmas in the workhouse for the Windies
Peter Hoare
December 23, 1999
'Christmas Day in the Workhouse' could be the theme of the West Indies
preparations for the second and final test beginning at the Basin Reserve,
Wellington on Boxing Day. For New Zealand it is more a case of 'Hark the
Herald Angels Sing' following their stirring but unlikely victory in the
first test at Hamilton.
Showing the sort of generosity that makes Santa Claus look like Scrooge the
West Indies contrived to be the first team in 122 years of test cricket to
lose after a double century opening partnership.
Top of their Christmas present list is a backbone for their batting. 276 for
0 to 365 all out and 93 in the second innings tells its own story.
Captain Brian Lara must lead by example. His display at Hamilton suggested
that he had enjoyed his first experience of the 10 over an innings
CricketMax format so much that he had decided to keep playing it in the test
match. He twice fell to reckless shots.
Ricardo Powell is the batsman whose place is most at risk. He made 0 in his
first test innings, dropped an important catch and bowled a few overs of
indifferent off spin. In the second innings he top scored with 30, though in
a style that made the early fall of his wicket seem inevitable. There is no
doubt that he has all the shots but he needs to select them much more
judiciously. His promise will probably keep him in the team, otherwise
Darren Ganga is the most likely replacement.
A better option might be a change in the order. Jimmy Adams was not out in
the first innings at Hamilton and last out in the second, but scored only 42
in total. Given the flimsy nature of the West Indian tail, it makes sense
for Adams to go in at least a place higher if his adhesive qualities are to
be of any value.
It is not all batting gloom for Lara's team. The opening partnership between
Sherwin Campbell and Adrian Griffith recalled the days of Haynes and
Greenidge, in volume if not quite in style. Campbell has performed before,
but Griffith, in only his third test, was a revelation.
He impressed as much for the strokes he did not play as for those he did.
With an acute sense of the location of his off stump he frustrated the Kiwi
bowlers by repeatedly moving his bat from the line of the ball at the last
moment, giving the impression of being beaten when this was not so. He
batted for over ten hours in the match. Ten minutes seemed to exhaust the
concentration of some of his colleagues.
While reports of Basin Reserve groundsman Trevor Jackson attending to his
duties in a red suit and white beard while the roller is pulled by a team of
reindeer may be exaggerated, early observation suggests that he may be
delivering to the West Indies bowlers the present of a pacy pitch.
If so, leg spinner Ramnarine may concede his place to Pedro Collins or
Mervyn Dillon. The variation offered by Collins as a left armer plus his
superior batting skills may put him first in line. Both might play if it is
thought possible that Franklyn Rose would repeat a disappointing first test
performance.
The one change in the New Zealand squad is prompted by the broken finger
suffered by opener Matt Horne when chasing the 70 required for victory. His
replacement is Mathew Sinclair of Central Districts. The Australian born
batsman has an impressive statistical pedigree. His career average of 45.96
is the best of active players in New Zealand. Last season he topped the
figures with 104.61. In recent weeks he has top scored for New Zealand A
with 182 against England and (less impressively but more relevantly) 38
versus the West Indians.
If he plays he will bat high in the order, probably at three. Gary Stead
will continue as opener, though the makeshift nature of his position was not
improved by identical dismissals in both innings at Hamilton, bowled round
his legs by Courtney Walsh. Craig Spearman moves up to the other opener's
spot.
If any criticism can be made of a fine batting performance it is that though
all the batsmen got a start to some extent, the highest score was Chris
Cairns' swashbuckling 72. To be successful again somebody has to go on to
three figures. Stephen Fleming needs no reminding that he has twenty two
test fifties, but only two centuries.
Though the New Zealand management would strongly disagree, Monday's victory
disguised the high risks of selecting two spinners and only two mainline
quick bowlers. If the prognosis of a fast track is correct expect left armer
Shayne O'Connor to replace off spinner Paul Wiseman. This would be tough on
Wiseman who bowled better than anybody on the first day at Hamilton and did
not get called upon in the second innings.
Consideration may be given to delaying Sinclair's debut in favour of playing
the extra bowler, but this looks a less likely option, particularly given
the strong preference for Fleming to remain at four. It leaves Nash and
Vettori as the best numbers nine and ten in world cricket.
As ever, the fate of the match comes down to key individuals. For the West
Indies Lara has to show greatness in the mind as well as in range of shots.
Courtney Walsh will probably have to wait for the home series against
Zimbabwe to overtake Kapil Dev as test cricket's leading wicket taker (he
needs nine more) but is the most likely to dent the confidence of the home
team.
For New Zealand Chris Cairns is the now the pivot around which the team
revolves, the underachiever no more. His second innings bowling was the one
thing in the first test that was more breath taking than his batting, no
matter that technological (or human) problems saved him from being given run
out for a duck. Arguably only Jacques Kallis is now his superior as a test
all rounder. He is a better bowler than Klusener and a better batsman than
Pollock.
I take New Zealand to complete a very good year by winning the series two
nil.
© 1999
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