Dean G: Zimbabwe on verge of black breakthough (01 Nov 94)
Much earlier than was expected - almost two years after their inaugural Test match - Zimbabwe are close to selecting a black cricketer for a Test
01-Nov-1994
Zimbabwe on verge of black breakthough - Geoffrey Dean
Much earlier than was expected - almost two years after their
inaugural Test match - Zimbabwe are close to selecting a black
cricketer for a Test. In Henry Olonga, Zimbabwe know they have a
young fast bowler of enormous potential. Olonga, 18, does not
leave school until next month. Already he is genuinely quick,
with an easy, natural action that will need minimal technical
tinkering. The touring South African A team, against whom he
played for Matabeleland this month, were highly impressed by him.
On a sluggish pitch, he claimed just one victim, Rudi Steyn, lbw,
but was rated the fastest bowler on either side. The problem for
Zimbabwe, however, is that Olonga is multitalented: not only is
he one of the brightest pupils at Plumtree, a leading private
school, but he is also a potential Olympic sprinter and the owner
of a magnificent tenor voice. Result? He is being courted by
American universities, with mentions of athletics scholarships,
and has an offer from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic
Art to start there next September. Two years ago Olonga was running the 100 metres in 10.6 sec. Such a time is comparable with
those recorded at the same age by former Olympic champion Carl
Lewis. Since 1992 Olonga has taken part in no serious competitive
running events, though he still moves like lightning in the field
and would undoubtedly regain his edge once back in training. "I
can't say that at the moment athletics interests me," he admits
before adding cynically: "It seems that to get to the top you
need to take drugs." His father, a Kenyan paediatrician who
lives in Bulawayo, where the family settled 10 years ago, wants
him to run for Kenya. Olonga's Kenyan passport is another stumbling block as far as representing Zimbabwe is concerned. His father does not want him to give it up, yet the Zimbabwean government will not allow foreign passport holders to play sport for
Zimbabwe. Nor can residents hold two passports. Olonga is entitled to a Zimbabwean passport, because his mother was born here.
But to apply, Olonga must ignore paternal pressure and renounce
his Kenyan citizenship. His elder brother, Victor, has already
done so in order to play international rugby for Zimbabwe.
Olonga's Kenyan passport made him ineligible for the second Test
against Sri Lanka, for which he was on the short-list. He could
have been granted special dispensation to play (just as Bruce
Grobbelaar was for the national football side) if he had stated
his intention to apply for a Zimbabwean passport, but the selectors had no wish to pressure him at such a young age. Olonga
says he is keen to play for Zimbabwe, though the burning desire
may not be there, for cricket is not part of black Zimbabwean
culture. More and more are, nevertheless, coming through at
schools level. There is little or no money to be made in cricket
here; not that that will unduly concern Olonga, well educated and
from a well-off family. A Test debut is still a distinct possibility when the Pakistanis come for a three-match series in
February. Coach John Hampshire believes Waqar Younis and Wasim
Akram will bowl Zimbabwe out on any surface and wants to do away
with the slow, flat pitches of the Sri Lankan series, and have
quicker, seaming wickets against Pakistan to give his bowlers a
chance . This would certainly help Olonga's prospects of selection. He lacked control last year when his run-up was 30-35 yards
long. But this year he has shortened it and greatly improved his
accuracy.
Thanks :: The Daily Telegraph