CMJ: Kent in form to floor favourites (12 July 1997)
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
12-Jul-1997
Saturday 12 July 1997
Kent in form to floor favourites
Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
IF BOTH counties can rise to the occasion, two of the best
equipped teams in the land will make today`s Benson and Hedges
Cup final, the 26th and possibly the last, one of the best of all
the Lord`s one-day showdowns. Kent should win a trophy this
season whatever the outcome today but for Surrey, a team with
all the talents but nothing like the cohesive spirit of their
opponents, this may represent the only chance.
Surrey looked bubbly enough in their preparations at Lord`s
yesterday despite the shattering defeat by Notting- hamshire
in the other knockout competition in midweek and the fact that
their Australian coach, David Gilbert, has still not made up
his mind whether to accept a new two-year contract.
It is the eighth mid-season final involving Kent, only Surrey`s
fourth, but both have so far lost more finals than they have won
and both, even in recent times, have been known to have the kind
of collective bad day which deflates the expectations of supporters and renders the whole event an anti-climax. The rapid
fall of early wickets is what usually creates a one-sided final
but on a true pitch in the middle of summer it should not happen, even against bowling attacks of the quality which will
be on display today. Kent have four Test bowlers and a fifth in
Matthew Fleming who has just been chosen to represent England
as a one-day specialist in the Hong Kong Sixes, Surrey have five
Test bowlers and two with one-day international experience in
the Hollioake brothers.
Between them indeed Surrey, with Alastair Brown and Adam and
Ben Hollioake, and Kent, with Fleming and Mark Ealham, contribute
five of seven limited-overs specialists picked for Hong Kong
and all will aspire to be in England`s eleven for the opening
match of the World Cup at Lord`s two seasons hence. It would do
Adam Hollioake`s chances of leading England then no harm if
Surrey were to win today.
The match may hang on the performance of the flair players,
especially Fleming for Kent and Brown and the Hol- lioakes
for Surrey. The brothers have happy memories of the only time
they played together at Lord`s. Ben`s performance in the match
which completed a clean sweep of the one-day internationals was
precocious and mature. He will go in third again today if Brown
should be out quickly as he attempts to take the match by storm.
Surrey may be favourites on paper but Kent should win on form.
They are second in the Sunday League and until Middlesex
knocked them out of the NatWest and Graham Cowdrey pulled a
leg muscle they were looking almost unbeatable, despite missing the match-winning batting of their former overseas players,
Carl Hooper and Aravinda de Silva. They are shrewdly led from
behind the stumps by Steve Marsh but they are also bottomheavy.
Their opening attack of Dean Headley and Martin McCague has ideal
back-up in Ealham, Fleming and the gifted leg- spinning allrounder, Paul Strang. Someone will want Strang next year if Kent
are committed to Hooper, and today gives him the ideal shop
window. Kent`s bowling strength was emphasised by the fact that
Julian Thompson and Alan Igglesden are in a 14 strong enough
to exclude Ben Phillips.
The longer the form of the game, the more vulnerable Kent are
in view of their relatively modest top-order batting, but under
this year`s 50-over regulations, whereby only two men are allowed outside the circle for the first 15 overs, they have a dangerous pair of strikers in Fleming and Matthew Walker and they
were relieved to declare Cowdrey fit yesterday. Their own
three Ws - Ward, Walker and Wells - have tended to get out when
set this season so the key to winning today may be for one of
them to play the big innings. It is time for Trevor Ward to
show he can do it, but all Kent will have to beware Martin
Bicknell`s ability to swing the new ball.
Surrey also milk the first 15 overs if they can, with Alec
Stewart and Brown capable of outrageous brilliance on the sort
of dry, true pitch which today`s appears to be.
David Gilbert was disappointed when not appointed to the vacant job as coach to his native New South Wales two months ago,
a chance he would have taken mainly for the sake of his young
family, but feels that he still has much to contribute if the
improvements evident last year at Surrey are to be maintained. Losing Stewart, Graham Thorpe, Mark Butcher and, earlier in the season, Adam Hollioake, has not helped but if it all
came together today the chances are that he would announce his
intention to stay at the Oval.
Kent (probable): M J Walker, M V Fleming, T R Ward, A P Wells, G
R Cowdrey, N J Llong, M A Ealham, P A Strang, S A Marsh, M J
McCague, D W Headley.
Surrey (probable): A D Brown, A J Stewart, B C Hollioake, G
P Thorpe, A J Hollioake, M A Butcher, J D Ratcliffe, C C Lewis,
I D K Salisbury, Saqlain Mushtaq, M P Bicknell.
Umpires: D Shepherd & G Sharp.
THE ROUTE TO THE FINAL
KENT
(Group C winners)
v Surrey (Oval) won by 4 wkts
v Hants (Canterbury) won by 2 wkts
v Sussex (Canterbury) won by 6 wkts
v British Univs (Canterbury) won by 4 wkts
v Gloucs (Bristol) no result
Quarter-final
v Warwicks (Canterbury) won by 4 wkts
Semi-final
v Northants (Canterbury) won by 66 runs
Kent have won the cup three times - 1973, 1976, 1978 - and were
runners-up in 1977, 1986, 1992 and 1995.
SURREY
(Group C runners-up)
v Kent (Oval) lost by 4 wkts
v Gloucs (Bristol) won by 3 wkts
v British Univs (Oval) won by 6 wkts
v Hants (Southampton) won by 165 runs
v Sussex (Oval) won by 11 runs
Quarter-final
v Essex (Chelmsford) won by 6 wkts
Semi-final
v Leics (Oval) won by 130 runs
Surrey won the cup in 1974 and were runners-up in 1979 and 1981.
Previous meetings: Of 16 games, Kent have won 10, Surrey six.
The sides have not met in a final but Kent won their semi-final
games in 1976 and 1992.
FINALISTS` RECORDS
KENT
Highest total for: 338-4 (v Somerset).
Highest total against: 308-5 (Worcs).
Lowest total for: 73 (v Middlesex).
Lowest total against: 67 (Minor Counties).
Highest score for: 143 C J Tavare (v Somerset).
Highest score against: 137* B C Rose (Somerset).
Best bowling for: 6-41 T N Wren (v Somerset).
Best bowling against: 5-23 S T Clarke (Surrey).
SURREY
Highest total for: 333-6 (v Hants).
Highest total against: 318-8 (Kent).
Lowest total for: 89 (v Notts).
Lowest total against: 80 (Ireland).
Highest score for: 167* A J Stewart (v Somerset).
Highest score against: 137* R J Cunliffe (Gloucs).
Best bowling for: 5-15 S G Kenlock (v Ireland).
Best bowling against: 6-25 S J Renshaw (Hants).
FINAL RECORDS
Highest score: 290-5 (Essex v Surrey 1979).
Lowest score: 117 (Derbyshire v Hampshire 1988).
Biggest victories: Lancs bt Worcs by 69 runs, 1990; Somerset
bt Notts by 9 wkts, 1982.
Best innings: 132* (I V Richards, Somerset v Surrey 1981).
Best bowling: 5-13 (S T Jefferies, Hants v Derbys 1988).
Compiled by FRANK WHEELDON
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)