First One-day starts today at The Wanderers (22 January 1999)
Seeking a change in fortunes, the West Indies have included all four of their new players for the first of the seven One-day Internationals against South Africa at the Wanderers here today
22-Jan-1999
22 January 1999
First One-day starts today at The Wanderers
From Tony Cozier in Johannesburg
Windies make 4 changes
Seeking a change in fortunes, the West Indies have included all four
of their new players for the first of the seven One-day Internationals
against South Africa at the Wanderers here today.
The two limited-overs allrounders of contrasting experience, the
left-handed Keith Arthurton, with 91 previous matches behind him, and
the right-handed Keith Semple, with one, will fill the middle-order
spots of Nos. 6 and 7, left-arm spinner Neil McGarrell is preferred to
leg-spinner Rawl Lewis and Reon King is chosen along with the only
other remaining fast bowlers, Curtly Ambrose and Nixon McLean.
The team management's request for Merv Dillon to be retained as the
fourth fast bowler was finally denied by the Board yesterday morning,
keeping the squad to its original 15.
The episode proved traumatic for Dillon. He was packed and about to
leave for the airport on Wednesday when he was advised to stay as
efforts were being made to have him remain. He was then called again
yesterday and told he would have to go.
It was completely in keeping with the confusion that has bedeviled the
tour even before it started.
With Stuart Williams and Clayton Lambert both dispatched back home and
the justifiable reluctance to subject Daren Ganga to another torturous
examination to follow the one he had in the Test, Shivnarine
Chanderpaul has been given the job to open with Philo Wallace.
It is a position to which Chanderpaul is used in the abbreviated form
of the game, having scored his one hundred there, 109 not out against
India at Kensington Oval in 1997.
It means captain Brian Lara will revert to No.3 which the persistent
loss of early wickets and the threat of Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock
made him desert in the Tests. The absence of the injured Donald who
accounted for him five times in his 10 Test innings could have been
the influencing factor in the decision. The West Indies will have to
overcome not only opponents whose quality fielding makes them even
more formidable in the limited-overs game than in the Tests but an
inferiority complex that became increasingly more evident throughout
the past two months.
The addition of the four players not involved in that debacle should
be an advantage. So should the speed, accuracy and sure-handedness of
Arthurton and McGarrell in the strategic fielding positions within the
field restricting area.
Their keenness has brought a new intensity to the practice sessions
although they will clearly be short of match practice in South African
conditions. Unlike England and Sri Lanka in Australia, whose
specialist teams prepared for the current World Series tournament with
warm-up matches, the new West Indians have had to make do with
workouts in the nets.
The South Africans start with the confidence not only of the Test
series whitewash behind him but also their triumphs in the
Commonwealth Games, when a makeshift team defeated full strength
Australia in the final, and in the Wills International Cup in
Bangladesh in October when they beat the West Indies in the final.
While the 17 from whom they will select include all those who played
in Bangladesh as well as Pollock and Lance Klusener, who didn't, the
West Indies have only seven of those who lost the final by four
wickets. Pollock's return is matched by that of Curtly Ambrose who
also missed the Bangladesh tournament.
Ambrose, back in action for the first time since he strained a
hamstring muscle in the Fourth Test just over two weeks ago, brings
the vast experience of 151 ODIs to a team whose bowling is short on
the commodity. It does nothing to lift the standard of the fielding in
which his fellow fast bowlers, McLean and King, are the most
vulnerable links.
The ground has been sold out to its 20,000 capacity for more than a
week for what is the first of the four day-night matches to be played
under floodlights. The other three are on weekends and will be played
during the day and all are expected to have full houses, in spite of
the obvious plight of the West Indies team at present.
Prompted by political pressure for the inclusion of more non-white
players in the South Africa, two black fast bowlers of differing ages
have been chosen in South Africa's squad of 17. But neither teenaged
fast bowler Victor Mptisang of Free State nor 31-year-old Henry
Williams of Boland, who both played against the West Indies in earlier
tour matches, is expected to be included until later in the series.
The Teams:
West Indies: Brian Lara (Capt), Philo Wallace, Shivnarine
Chanderpaul, Carl Hooper, Keith Arthurton, Keith Semple, Ridley
Jacobs, Nixon McLean, Neil McGarrell, Curtly Ambrose and Reon King.
South Africa (from): Hansie Cronje (Capt), Gary Kirsten, Mike
Rindel, Daryll Cullinan, Jacques Kallis, Jonty Rhodes, Herschelle
Gibbs, Shaun Pollock, Mark Boucher, Lance Klusener, Pat Symcox, Steve
Elsworthy, Nick Boje, Dale Benkenstein, Andrew Hall, Victor Mpitsang
and Henry Williams.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)