Date-stamped : 18 Aug2000 - 14:23
1 March 1996
22nd ODI: Zimbabwe v Australia, Match Report
Mark Nicholas
All so comfortable for Australia
Yesterday, under hot sun in Nagpur and in an atmosphere of anti-
climax, Australia made light work of Zimbabwe.
The only alarm for Mark Taylor was losing the toss, for the
pitch was dry and would clearly spin, but his team thought
nothing of it and coasted to a comfortable eight-wicket win with
14 overs to spare.
The tournament favourites were too professional,
too experienced and too classy for the part-timers, who remain bottom
of the group and near certain not to qualify for the quarter-finals.
Australia appear to have it all, save perhaps for a really
quick bowler to do an Akram or a Garner if things are not to
plan, and in Shane Warne they have the jewel in cricket`s crown.
Warne was given the man of the match award for his four
wickets, though in truth he did not bowl as well as he can.
His bowling last Tuesday night in a thrilling match against
India in Bombay was good enough to move Eripalli Prasanna,
India`s finest off-spinner, to superlatives.
There were some superlatives yesterday, notably the wrong `un to
Andy Flower, which knocked the stuffing out of Zimbabwe, and
the wicked leg-break - la that ball to Mike Gatting - to Charles
Lock, which finished them off. But most of Warne`s 91/2 overs
were spent having a net, fiddling with this and that and fine-
tuning himself for the bigger fish to come.
One possible problem for Australia is that, so well are the
opening pair batting, that the middle-order are not getting a
knock. They were off to their usual flier, the captain
cutting and leg- glancing, and Mark Waugh clipping through
midwicket with his characteristic economy of effort.
Zimbabwe have had a rotten time of this World Cup. They are
short on batting without the injured David Houghton and need
one experienced bowler to complement the promising talents of
Heath Streak and Paul Strang, whose leg-spinners caused Australia
some problems and would shine brightly were it not for Warne`s
brilliance.
Worse still, the best cricketer, Andy Flower, is over-
stretched in his role as captain, wicketkeeper and opening
batsman. He dropped himself down the order for the unconvincing
success against Kenya and stuck with it for this game, but
weakening a strength at the top of the order to paper a crack in
the middle rarely does the trick.
At least there was some belated joy for Andy `Bundu` Waller,
the farmer who answered his country`s call at the age of 36 when
Houghton was injured.
Pushed up to open and attack, Waller did just so, laying into
the seamers with thunderous cover-drives. His excellent 101-ball
innings contained 10 boundaries and plenty of good running
between the wickets.
Man of the match: SK Warne.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk)
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