Allrounders the key (18 May 1999)
The formula for success in the seventh World Cup has quickly taken shape but the West Indies will be hard-pressed to meet it
18-May-1999
18 May 1999
Allrounders the key
Tony Cozier
The formula for success in the seventh World Cup has quickly
taken shape but the West Indies will be hard-pressed to meet it.
The three key matches have all been won by the teams stronger in
all-round and seam bowling depth, a predictable sequence in
early season in England with the white ball that is likely to
continue.
England used six bowlers varying in pace between medium and fast
and four all-rounders to win the opener at Lord's over the 1996
champions, Sri Lanka, who included only three quicks and
depended primarily on the spin of Muttiah Muralitheran.
South Africa, the justifiable favourites, had the pace and swing
of Shaun Pollock, Jacques Kallis, Alan Donald and Lance Klusener
and batted down to No. 9 against India at Hove. India could
respond only with two fast bowlers of their own, Javagal Srinath
and Venkatesh Prasad, and predictably lost.
Slow to heed the signs, the West Indies carried only three main
bowlers into their opening match here Sunday against Pakistan,
none of them batsmen. Their opponents dealt themselves a full
hand of five, three of them genuine all-rounders, two of whom
contributed significantly with the bat.
It was a policy that repeatedly cost them in the preceding
series against Australia in the Caribbean where the attack had a
similar configuration.
At the new Queen's Park in Grenada, Australia recovered from 116
for four to finish with a winning total of 288 for four. At the
old Queen's Park in Trinidad, Michael Bevan and Shane Warne
converted 104 for eight to 189 for nine that proved enough for
victory. At Bourda, in the reduced 30 overs match, Warne and
Steve Waugh took 119 for seven to 172 for seven and the
contrived tie. At Kensington, 171 for five became 253 for six.
Each time, the absence of a fourth strike bowler was keenly
felt.
Both captain Brian Lara and manager Clive Lloyd grudgingly
acknowledged that their selection erred on the side of caution,
restricting their attack to avoid an elongated tail.
They made the acceptable point that the ankle injury that put
Keith Arthurton out of action after a solitary over upset the
planning, forcing the expensive use of Jimmy Adams' tossed up
left-arm spin that was out of place in the gray, chilly
conditions.
But Arthurton was unlikely to have made the same impact as fast
bowlers Hendy Bryan or Reon King, who were looking on from the
pavilion.
The unpalatable fact is that the West Indies do not have, at
present, anyone near the quality of Wasim Akram, Azhar Mahmood,
Jacques Kallis, Lance Klusener or many of the other all-rounders
who are so critical to the composition of good limited-overs
teams.
The only equivalent they could claim, at a push, would be
Vasbert Drakes, who is carrying his form for Border in South
Africa from last season into the current county championship for
Nottinghamshire. As he did not play in either the Red Stripe
Bowl or the Busta Cup last season, he is unqualified under the
present West Indies Cricket Board.
The policy is certain to change for the remaining four matches
in the first round, the most critical of which is against New
Zealand in Southampton on Monday.
Defeat there would almost certainly eliminate the West Indies
since only three of the six group teams advance to the second
round Super Sixes and Pakistan and Australia are seemingly too
well balanced and confident to be denied.
At least, by then, the selection should be right.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)