Busta Cup: Plenty of chances (13 January 1999)
The 1999 regional four-day cricket championship gets underway tomorrow with the usual six teams - Jamaica, Barbados, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, the Leeward Islands and the Windward Islands - hunting the first hold on the Busta Cup
13-Jan-1999
13 January 1999
Busta Cup: Plenty of chances
The Jamaica Gleaner
The 1999 regional four-day cricket championship gets underway tomorrow
with the usual six teams - Jamaica, Barbados, Guyana, Trinidad and
Tobago, the Leeward Islands and the Windward Islands - hunting the
first hold on the Busta Cup.
Tomorrow's opening match brings together Trinidad and Tobago and
Guyana at Guaracara Park, on Friday it will be Jamaica versus the
Leeward Islands at Sabina Park and Barbados against the Windward
Islands at Kensington Park, and in the weeks leading up to the final,
which is scheduled to start on March 20, the contest should be close
and exciting.
Cricket fans, however, are hoping, not so much for close games and
exciting action, not so much that their team will emerge as
champions, but more so for high quality play. The wish, right around
the region, is for top quality performances by the players who they
hope will step up and address the West Indies selectors in a bid win
places on the beleaguered West Indies team.
Never before, certainly not since the first regional championship in
1966, has there been so many places up for grabs on the West Indies
team, and the opportunity is there for young players to parade not
only their skill but also their class and force the selectors to call
on them in an effort to change the recent fortunes of the West Indies
team.
To do so, however, the players need to score runs and plenty of them.
They can no longer be satisfied with looking good or playing one
good, substantial innings and expecting selection because of their
potential. They need to burst open the door with an avalanche of
runs. And the opportunity for that is also there.
Looking at the schedule of matches for the Busta Cup, all five rounds
of the championship plus the semi-finals will be played before the
first Test against Australia - enough time for the players to score
runs at home and away.
In the recent past, the young batsmen allowed past failures, like
Roland Holder and, to an extent, Keith Arthurton, to upstage them in
the regional competition and, faced with no alternative, the
selectors were forced to fall back on them.
Cricket fans who have witnessed the poor technique of batsmen like
Clayton Lambert, Philo Wallace, Stuart Williams and Floyd Reifer and
the carelessness of some of them are now praying that young players
around the region, batsmen like Christopher Gayle who is making his
debut, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Sylvester Joseph who need to convert
their potential into performance, will dominate the proceedings and
inspire the selectors to look ahead rather than behind.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)