Dropped chances let Barbados down
Any fielding side which misses six chances in a day deserves harsh criticism
13-Jan-2001
Any fielding side which misses six chances in a day deserves harsh
criticism. The exception was yesterday.
On a day in which Jamaica kept the hosts at bay on a pluperfect
batting strip to reach 243 for seven, Barbados were unable to hold on
a handful of agonisingly sharp offerings which came their way.
Four came in the final session, and the only ones which could have
been described as straightforward were Floyd Reifer's at slip from a
defensive prod and wicket-keeper Courtney Browne's mis-stumping.
Had any of the others been clutched onto, they would have required the
likes of a Hershelle Gibbs or a Mark Waugh. They were well wide of the
fieldsmen and neither could have been faulted. Barbados manager Tony
Howard, however, reckoned too many got away.
"I thought the fielding improved a little over the last match, but
just a little. "The chance that Philo (Wallace) tried for was an
excellent effort, but on the other hand, we had some very simple
dropped catches," he told the Saturday Sun.
"In cricket, it is not the ones that you drop, it is the ones that you
take and surely those are the ones you have to take if you are going
to make the difference in the game.
"I am not saying that the majority of them should have been taken. I
applaud the effort but I would like to have seen them taken."
The Barbados manager was hoping Jamaica could have been limited to a
total of under 200 after the defending champions chose to bat first.
"We could have done a lot better," Howard said. "They (Jamaica) have
already passed my restricted total. We need to get them out as quickly
as possible and try and get what I consider to the best part of the
wicket."
Barbados will be also keen to have a positive report from the medics
on their experienced batsman Roland Holder, who spent most of the day
in the pavilion with stomach problems. It was a second blow following
the late withdrawal of Ryan Hinds with a groin problem.
The first two sessions were almost identical, each producing just over
70 runs, two wickets and missed catches of a similar nature in a
similar position.
Between the start and lunch, the Jamaica casualties were Chris Gayle,
last season's MVP, whose defensive prod was pierced by Corey
Collymore, and Leon Garrick, spectacularly hauled in by Browne.
Garrick, however, gained a life when Holder, stationed at gully,
failed to hold on to a difficult diving chance.
An nearr-carbon-copy occurred in the second session when left-hander
Wayne Cuff benefited from Dave Marshall's inability to cling onto the
ball in another tumbling effort in the same position.
Cuff, a slim left-hander who has never distinguished himself at
regional level, made some use of the chance to reach a solid, if not
spectacular, half-century.
He looked assured against Marshall's leg-spin, but every Barbadian on
the field was certain he edged a catch to the keeper off the same
bowler before he passed his previous best first-class score of 35.
By tea, he reached 59, but Barbados had managed to remove teenager
Brenton Parchment and captain Robert Samuels during the pre-tea
session.
Parchment, a West Indies youth team representative at the 2000 World
Cup in Sri Lanka, was shaping well for his 23 when Bryan trapped him
lbw for 23. It was the first of four successive dismissals in which
the Jamaicans were guilty of playing across the line.
Samuels, too, was in no bother when he attempted to sweep Marshall and
was a clear lbw victim ten minutes short of the tea break, which was
taken at 149 for four.
Within the first 45 minutes on resumption, Barbados took a slight
advantage by claiming the wickets of Cuff and Gareth Breese.
Cuff, who made 65 from 136 balls, dragged an intended pull into his
stumps off fast bowler Dayne Maynard and without addition Breese was
lbw swinging across a Marshall full-toss.
Jamaica were then 161 for seven before Barbados lost their grip.
Browne missed another diving leg-chance before Nehemiah Perry scored
the first of his 37 runs and Keith Hibbert, unbeaten on 32, was put
down by Reifer when he was six.