Four out of six for Zimbabwe Board XI
The Zimbabwe Board XI has recently returned from a three-week tour of South Africa, where they won four matches out of six against North West B, Easterns B and KwaZulu-Natal B
John Ward and Tevor Penney
17-Nov-1999
The Zimbabwe Board XI has recently returned from a three-week
tour of South Africa, where they won four matches out of six
against North West B, Easterns B and KwaZulu-Natal B.
To put the record in perspective, it must be admitted that the
first two teams are still fairly weak provincial sides, and all
were B teams while the Board XI were fielding teams containing
several Test players. It remains a little disappointing that our
record against such sides is not even better.
Frequent changes of personnel make it difficult for a team to
play at its best, though, and Test calls for several players
caused necessary alterations. Trevor Penney admitted it was
disruptive from a playing point of view, but it was impressive
how everybody fitted into the team despite the difference in
ages, and the team spirit was 'once again fantastic'. The
following all played at one time or another on tour:
Trevor Penney (captain), Andy Blignaut, Gary Brent, Stuart
Carlisle, Deon Ebrahim, Trevor Gripper, Greg Lamb, Gus Mackay,
Doug Marillier, Everton Matambanadzo, Pommie Mbangwa, Bruce
Moore-Gordon, Henry Olonga, Ray Price, Bryan Strang, Dirk Viljoen
and Brighton Watambwa.
As usual, a three-day match was played between the teams,
followed by a one-day game.
1st three-day match, v North West B, 14, 15, 16 October, at
Potchefstroom.
NORTH WEST B 313/8 dec (Thinus Enslin 111) and 181 (Gary Brent
4/21). ZIMBABWE BOARD XI 410 (Doug Marillier 57, Andy Blignaut
129) and 85/1 (Marillier 55). Zimbabwe Board XI won by nine
wickets.
Trevor Penney won the toss and decided to bowl first on a green
pitch. The team bowled quite well and had North West struggling
at 160 for six, but then some undisciplined bowling as the pitch
flattened out enabled them to declare.
The pick of the bowlers was Gus Mackay, who took two for 31; the
rest of the seam bowlers tried hard but lacked discipline. Ray
Price bowled well without luck. Overall they were disappointed
not to have bowled them out for less.
The top order batted very well as a unit, but they kept losing
wickets at crucial times. Andy Blignaut hit a 'fantastic' 129,
with 6 sixes and 16 fours off 122 balls, which enabled the team
to reach a total of 410, a good lead of 97 runs.
The bowling in the second innings was much improved, with good
discipline and patience in evidence. Gary Brent was the pick of
the seamers, while Price's three wickets came at vital stages.
As they chased 85 to win, Doug Marillier reached his second fifty
of the match and was unfortunately out with only six further runs
needed for victory.
ONE-DAY MATCH, 17 October
ZIMBABWE BOARD XI 271/6 (50 overs) (Doug Marillier 60, Stuart
Carlisle 62). NORTH WEST B 85 (29.2 overs) (Gus Mackay 3/20).
Zimbabwe Board XI won by 186 runs.
The Board XI won the toss on a very good batting pitch and so
decided to bat. Mackay (39 off 24 balls) and Marillier got them
off to a great start, with 59 in 6.2 overs. Carlisle made a good
fifty and all the other batsmen made useful contributions,
enabling them to set a difficult target.
Mackay took three early wickets with some fine swing bowling
which put North West out of the game. They struggled thereon as
all the Board XI bowlers continued to bowl professionally, and
were eventually dismissed for 81.
2nd three-day match, v Easterns B, 21, 22, 23 October, at Benoni
EASTERNS 280 (Hussein Manack 116) and 263/5 dec (Derek Brand
79*). ZIMBABWE BOARD XI 253/8 dec (Stuart Carlisle 55, Bruce
Moore-Gordon 50*; M Mostert 4/40) and 143/3. Match drawn.
The Board XI lost the toss and fielded. The pitch was very low
and slow. Their good seam attack could not penetrate the
Easterns batting, but did a good job of containing them to 280 in
100 overs. Price and Dirk Viljoen were very economical.
The Board XI lost two early wickets before Carlisle joined
Gripper at the crease and the two played exceptionally well,
along with Price and Moore-Gordon who ensured they achieved their
bonus points. Penney declared behind, hoping Easterns would make
a game of it
He felt, though, that the opposition had shown a negative
attitude throughout the game, a draw being their main objective,
and this continued. They found it hard to bowl them out as the
ball did not bounce above knee height. Easterns eventually
declared, leaving the Board XI an impossible target at six runs
an over. Penney instructed his batsmen to go in and get some
batting practice. The match was eventually called off early.
ONE-DAY MATCH, 24 October
ZIMBABWE BOARD XI 177 (44.1 overs) (Trevor Penney 66; Colin
Douglas 3/37, M Mostert 3/25). EASTERNS 148 (Ray Price 3/34).
Zimbabwe Board XI won by 29 runs.
The Board XI lost the toss and were put in to bat. They had a
bad start due to some bad shot selection and were five down for
31 at one stage. Penney and Ebrahim (27) steadied the ship,
enabling them to reach a total of 171.
The Board XI bowling and fielding were superb and resulted in
Easterns being dismissed for 148. It was a particularly good
fightback for the Board XI after starting so badly.
3rd three-day match, v Natal B, 28, 29, 30 October, at Kingsmead,
Durban
NATAL B 322/9 dec (Duncan Brown 161) and 71/0. ZIMBABWE BOARD XI
97 (Jonathan Bastow 5/21) and 293 (Ray Price 50, Dirk Viljoen 56,
Gus Mackay 55; Rudi de Vry 6/64). Natal B won by ten wickets.
Penney won the toss and decided to bowl, his decision being
influenced by heavy rains prior to the match. The pitch, though,
turned out to be a very flat batting track, but Matambanadzo
achieved two early break-throughs. The seamers bowled a steady
line and length but lacked penetration, although Price contained
the batsmen very well.
The Board XI batted for an hour that evening following the
declaration and lost three vital wickets, although Penney feels
that the umpires were at fault for insisting the match continued
in bad light. The next morning they had a terrible first hour
where the batsmen failed to apply themselves and played too many
bad shots. They were required to follow on 225 runs behind.
Second time round they were much improved, with Price batting
four hours for his fifty while Carlisle (46), Viljoen and Mackay
(30 balls, 5 fours, 3 sixes) contributed useful scores. With
nobody going on to a really big score, though, Natal needed only
69 to win, which they achieved without losing a wicket.
ONE-DAY MATCH, 31 Oct
NATAL B 114 (Gary Brent 3/8). ZIMBABWE BOARD XI 115/5 (Stuart
Carlisle 49*). Zimbabwe Board XI won by five wickets.
The Board XI lost the toss and fielded. Mackay and Matambanadzo
bowled exceptionally well with the new ball to destroy the top
order; the home side were at different stages 10 for four and 41
for eight. They recovered to 115, a target that was always
achievable, and they lost only five wickets in reaching it.
According to Penney, Carlisle was the best batsman and Mackay the
best all-rounder, taking good wickets and scoring useful runs,
usually at a furious pace. He was most impressive opening the
batting in one-day matches, and Penney would not be surprised to
see him called up to the national side.
Brent also improved as an all-rounder; his batting is developing
well and he is bowling quicker and hitting the deck harder.
Price had a very good tour, contributing with both bat and ball,
and he is improving all the time.
Matambanadzo played a major part, bowling at real pace and
swinging the ball away, often dismissing the early opposition
batsmen. Wicket-keeper Moore-Gordon batted well, twice saving
the team from collapsed with valuable innings.
Although they may not have made any headlines, the younger
players Deon Ebrahim and Greg Lamb both benefited greatly from
the tour and learned quickly.
The Board XI has two home matches next month, beginning on 9
December in Mutare and 16 December in Kwekwe. We look forward to
some more sterling performances, as long as the weather is
co-operative. Those in South Africa who arrange the fixtures
might take the Zimbabwean rainy season a little more into
consideration.