Igglesden fills Caddick void
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins in Bridgetown
The West Indies selectors have announced more or less the expected team for the first two one-day internationals - the opening game is at Kensington Oval next Wednesday - and for the
first Test in Kingston starting a week on Saturday. England's
selectors perhaps had tougher decisions to make for the four-day
game against Barbados. Matthew Maynard and Nasser Hussain, as
expected, are the batsmen omitted and if the injured Andrew
Caddick were to be substituted for Alan Igglesden, the 11 chosen
- Atherton, Stewart, Ramprakash, Smith, Hick, Thorpe, Russell,
Fraser, Igglesden, Malcolm and Tufnell - may take the field at
Sabina Park. Either Chris Lewis or one of the two eliminated
batsmen might have been given another chance here if Jack Russel
had been rested, but captain Mike Atherton said of his wicketkeeper yesterday: "I'd like to keep him getting runs at seven.
He's a very important member of the team." He indicated, however, that Alec Stewart will keep wicket in the one-day match
and that he will do as much keeping as he wants in this game to
prepare him for that role. The chief reason for choosing
Igglesden seems to be that, with Caddick unlikely to play in the
international, he may be needed to do so instead. Perhaps bearing in mind his own boring exile in India last winter, the captain is also anxious to keep everyone involved in the tour for
as long as possible. The West Indies themselves have made two
concessions to the demands of the limited-overs game, which is
two more than they once did. Jimmy Adams, the versatile
Jamaican, will keep wicket next Wednesday with Junior Murray
returning for the Test. Adams bats and bowls left-handed (his
bowling helped to win the Test against South Africa here two
years ago) but for the moment he is cast as one-day utility man
and Test reserve for Keith Arthurton. The other one-day specialist is the 'veteran' Roger Harper, a player who seems almost to
hail from a different era although he is only 30 and remains a
wonderful fielder. He played in the last West Indies Test match,
against Sri Lanka in Colombo last December, but he was taken
there only because it was known that conditions would favour
spin bowling. Now Harper is named only for the one-day game,
along with the five fast bowlers expected - Ambrose, Walsh,
Cummins and a brace of Benjamins. Anderson Cummins has had only
a moderate season in a Barbados side who finished above only the
weak Windward Islands in the Red Stripe Cup, so he needs a good
performance against England in the match starting today to
justify his selection. Desmond Haynes is playing, he says, "to
feel England a little". It is good for the touring team that he
is doing so and the renewal of his acquaintance with Devon
Malcolm and his Middlesex team-mate, Angus Fraser, should be
instructive. Barbados are led by Roland Holder, another who
toured Sri Lanka but who had an unsuccessful Red Stripe season
with the bat until saving the match with a second-innings hundred in Trinidad on Monday. The home team have a proud record
against MCC and England teams to uphold. England have not beaten
them since Len Hutton's 1953-54 tour. A decade later, when Sir
Garfield Sobers was still in his pomp, the island were strong
enough to take on the Rest of the World. The challenge they present now is less formidable but it is encouraging that Atherton
says he intends to put winning the match ahead of any idea of
treating it merely as practice. (Thanks: The Daily Telegraph)
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)