Brian Lara: We expect a Trinidad and Tobago victory (4 Oct 1997)
THE Trinidad and Tobago cricket team arrived in Jamaica very confident of being the first winners of the Red Stripe Bowl, and completing a hattrick in regional One-day cricket
01-Jan-1970
Saturday, October 4, 1997
We expect a Trinidad and Tobag victory
Brian Lara
THE Trinidad and Tobago cricket team arrived in Jamaica very confident
of being the first winners of the Red Stripe Bowl, and completing a
hattrick in regional One-day cricket.
The last two years saw Trinidad and Tobago meeting Guyana in
Shell/Sandals One-day finals. In 1995, we hosted Guyana, and the rain
ruined the finals to leave us as joint champions.
Last year, we met Guyana again, this time in Guyana. That was definitely
the best day's cricket I have played for my country. Witnessing the team
spirit on that day is something I'll always remember and cherish.
Guyana were cruising to victory until the "never-say-die" team spirit
came out in full force. Danny's first hattrick pulled us through at the
end, not forgetting Man-of-the-Match Phil Simmons' all-round
performance.
T&T versus Guyana for the third time. What a great Red Stripe Bowl final
it would be, albeit without home advantage for either team.
Jamaica's weather apparently heard we were coming and greeted us with
some October showers. This meant we were unable to get in the kind of
practice planned as Thursday's session at UWI
was washed out and yesterday's was restricted to two hours in concrete
nets.
The batting has established itself already. I think Ragoonath has a
secure spot as TT's number one opening batsman. He's had a brilliant
1997 season, and his selection on the "A" team to South Africa should
give him the confidence to succeed in this tournament. His role is now
very clear-cut. He is not only expected to lay the foundation of the
batting but to carry on and give us match-winning innings.
His opening partner could, like last year, be Andr Lawrence, who seems
to be in some sort of form with a couple of half-centuries, including a
commanding 84, during trials.
I'm also thinking about Ian Bishop as an opener. He successfully
partnered Ragoo in our victory against world champions Sri Lanka in
April this year.
The number three and six positions will be decided between Smithy,
Roberts, and Ganga. The two most experienced players are Phil and
myself. I will probably go in at four, and Phil at five. With that
line-up, hopefully David Williams at seven will be coming in to throw
his bat at everything in the last five overs.
As for bowling, our proven formula for the last couple of years has been
one pacer with three spinners, and Phil and Andr doing their bit with
the ball. But now that we have more experienced fast bowlers doing well
(Nigel Francis, Mervyn Dillon and Ian Bishop are now all on West Indies
teams), we may lean towards two pacers and two spinners, along with Phil
and Andr.
It's no secret that Ian has a bit of a problem bowling in One-dayers so
we'll be looking to ease him in at the right time.
The new round-robin format allows us to experiment early on. Don't be
worried if you see a couple of the big names missing.
I'm not in total agreement with the format. I'd much prefer the
quarterfinal winners going through to the semis with second playing
third. It's a bit unfair to the teams that have done well in the early
stages for the fourth place team to still have a chance to take the
title.
Considered the underdogs by some, Bermuda were winless in 1996 but
that's no reason to take them lightly. Of course, there's a possibility
of meeting them again in the knockout stage, so we'll be assessing every
part of their game.
Be as positive as I am. Expect a victory.
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Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)