Cricket Round-Up (7 May 1999)
The name of Winston Davis should crop up in conversation during the next few weeks as the only bowler to have taken seven wickets in a World Cup match
07-May-1999
7 May 1999
Cricket Round-Up
Charles Randall
Pitching in for Davis
The name of Winston Davis should crop up in conversation during the
next few weeks as the only bowler to have taken seven wickets in a
World Cup match. The occasion was West Indies versus Australia at
Leeds in 1983.
Paralysed from the neck down and needing 24-hour care after an
accident, he will be hoping that a fund-raising match at Finedon,
near Wellingborough, on Sunday May 23 produces more than simply
memories.
Davis, who played 15 Tests and bowled fast for Northamptonshire and
Glamorgan on the county circuit, now lives in Worcestershire, having
moved from his native St Vincent where the accident occurred last
year while he was working on a church project.
Many people on the fringes of the game must feel uncomfortable that
able-bodied professional players and the county clubs routinely
generate hundreds of thousands of pounds on behalf of themselves and
their chums; energetic benefit committees have not been slow to use
the World Cup as a money focus.
Yet Davis and Jamie Hood, the Yorkshire second-team cricketer
paralysed in a car crash, have had 'benefits' well below an
acceptable figure.
Davis, 40, would have been in a serious financial straits last year
if readers of The Guardian had not contributed around £35,000, with
help from Wisden Cricket Monthly. It would be surprising if readers
of the The Daily Telegraph could not match that.
For the Finedon match, Viv Richards has agreed to play for the first
time since his retirement seven years ago, and there will be many
other famous faces and voices attending. A special fund was set up
three weeks ago, with Canada Life making an initial £5,000 donation.
The address of The Winston Davis Fund is: c/o Melanie Henson, 28
Eastfield Crescent, Finedon, Northants NN9 5DJ.
The first official final at Lord's has already taken place - the
table cricket national final, an English Cricket Board and Youth
Sports Trust project, assisted by the Lord's Taverners.
Table cricket was devised by Doug Williamson, an Australian lecturer
in disabled sport at Nottingham Trent University, making ingenious
use of a table tennis table.
The batsman uses a mini wooden cricket bat and the bowler runs a
golf-size plastic ball down a shute, with the choice of using an
alternative weighted one to induce swing. To score runs, any of nine
sliding side panels have to be struck, but missing a delivery means
the batsman is bowled or lbw if the ball strikes any part of his hand
or arm. Other rules refine the play.
The inaugural ECB competition for disabled schoolchildren, attracting
35 entrants, was won by Wilson Stuart School from Birmingham, who
beat the Yorkshire finalists Ralph Thoresley School at the new
Nursery Pavilion this week.
The occasion was visited by Alec Stewart and six other World Cup
captains. The cricket was competitive - the atmospheric World Cup
song was turned off when the players complained it was spoiling their
concentration.
Tracy Comber, one of the organisers, said: "The day couldn't have
gone better."
The World Cup is certain to attract many new spectators to the game,
which brings to mind Kenneth Hoskins's letter published in The
Cricketer some years ago, when he described taking his wife-to-be
Audrey to watch her first cricket match, at Southend in 1948,
accompanied by her uncle. As luck would have it, they saw Bradman's
Australians smash 721 against Essex in one day.
Uncle (proudly): "Well, Audrey, what did you think of that then?"
Audrey: "Well, it's all right, I suppose, but a bit slow."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)