Campbell and Strang lift Zimbabwe A
The highlights of the second day's play between Zimbabwe A and the West Indian tourists at Kwekwe Sports Club were a fine century by Alistair Campbell and an exotic fifty by the maverick Bryan Strang, either side of a dramatic middle-order collapse
John Ward
15-Jul-2001
The highlights of the second day's play between Zimbabwe A and the West
Indian tourists at Kwekwe Sports Club were a fine century by Alistair
Campbell and an exotic fifty by the maverick Bryan Strang, either side of
a dramatic middle-order collapse. The tourists finished the day 57 runs
ahead with all their second-innings wickets intact.
Zimbabwe A resumed at their overnight score of 26 for no wicket in reply to
the West Indians' 374. Campbell was soon playing the sort of innings that
makes Zimbabwean cricket followers shake their heads in wonder and
exasperation.
Campbell has probably played as many "brief cameos" as any player in the world, but so rarely do they turn into anything substantial in Test cricket. Here he was playing the bowling with as much ease as Chris Gayle had on the previous day, driving and pulling with all the time in the world, completely unaffected by the swinging ball.
Hamilton Masakadza less spectacularly matched him run for run, and this opening partnership had the potential to match that between Gayle and Daren Ganga the previous day. In theory, at least.
Colin Stuart broke the stand, though, trapping Masakadza lbw with a
full-length delivery, after making 33 of the 75-run partnership. Campbell
by now had apparently run out of adrenaline, and he offered scarcely a shot
in anger after morning drinks. He crawled past his fifty, and with Gavin Rennie
choosing to fight his way back to form by defensive methods, the play was
far from spectacular.
The rather painful struggle continued after lunch against the West Indian
spinners, the partnership coming to an end on 139 when Rennie (25) swung
across the line to Carl Hooper and was caught at the wicket. Campbell
remained somnolent until he reached the seventies, whereupon he hit the
unsuspecting Neil McGarrell for three fours in an over, and followed it up
with two more boundaries off Hooper.
Soon afterwards, a delicate cut off Corey Collymore brought Campbell his
20th four and his century, scored off 193 balls. He overshadowed the
normally lively Guy Croxford, who battled to score 16 before being bowled by
Stuart. He trapped Barney Rogers lbw first ball, and then bowled Stuart
Matsikenyeri in his next over to reduce Zimbabwe A to 236 for five at tea,
Campbell still there on 133.
Stuart struck again with the first ball after tea, bowling new batsman and home
captain Mluleki Nkala with a ball that cut back in as he shouldered arms.
Stuart was on a hat-trick for the second time in successive overs, but Don
Campbell survived.
Alistair had again run out of adrenaline and did little after tea before
being caught at the wicket for 140 off the second delivery with the second
new ball, bowled by Marlon Black, who then had Don four overs later caught
down the leg side for 12. Local ex-Academy player Travis Friend scored 17
before departing to the same combination, a fine diving catch by Ridley
Jacobs this time.
Then followed an entertaining last-wicket stand - no stand that includes
Bryan Strang ever fails to be entertaining - of 74 between Strang and
Raymond Price. Strang as usual mixed the powerfully unorthodox with the
almost recognisable and the comical as he reached exactly 50 off just 34
balls, whereupon Price (22) borrowed one of his partner's strokes, only to
mow a catch straight to mid-wicket. The tourists had their first-innings
lead reduced to just 29. Black took three wickets for 49 and Stuart five
for 58.
As Strang injured a finger while batting, Price opened the attack with his
left-arm spin opposite Friend, but to no avail. By the close the West
Indians had scored 28 without loss (Ganga 9, Gayle 17).