From The Boundary: Two from three (2 October 1998)
The 1998 Red Stripe Bowl limited-over cricket competition which gets under way on Tuesday in Jamaica and Guyana promises to be a close and exciting contest - especially as far as the race for the two semi-final places from Zone Two is concerned
02-Oct-1998
2 October 1998
From The Boundary: Two from three
Tony Becca
The 1998 Red Stripe Bowl limited-over cricket competition which gets
under way on Tuesday in Jamaica and Guyana promises to be a close and
exciting contest - especially as far as the race for the two
semi-final places from Zone Two is concerned.
The teams in Zone Two, which will be played in Jamaica, are defending
champions Leeward Islands, Jamaica, Barbados and the United States,
and at the end of the preliminary round on Sunday, October 11, one of
the Leeward Islands, Jamaica or Barbados will not make it to the
final four.
Jamaicans, however, are not worried. As far as they are concerned,
even without ace fast bowler Courtney Walsh, they will be one of the
four teams at Kaiser for the super weekend. Jamaicans, in fact, many
of them, believe Jamaica will not only make it to the final four, but
also, unlike last year, that they will make it to the last two and
win the title.
There are two reasons for the confidence.
The first one is that the batsmen of the Leeward Islands and Barbados
are suspect against good spin bowling, and the locals believe that an
attack which includes two of offspinner Nehemiah Perry, orthodox
left-arm spinner Ryan Cunningham and right-arm legspinner Brian
Murphy could prove too much for them - especially in a limited-over
competition where patience is not a virtue.
The second is the presence of batsmen like Raymond Ferguson and
Howard Harris - two hard-hitting batsmen who fear no foe and who, if
they really get going, could be devastating.
Only time will tell, however - just as it will be as far as the
performance of the US is concerned.
First-timers in the regional competition, the US are expected to be
easy pickings for the Leeward Islands, Jamaica and Barbados - even
with nine West Indians, including five Jamaicans, in their squad.
The US is not a cricketing country, cricket in the US is played on
mat, although the players are all West Indians, Indians and
Pakistanis they have become accustomed to playing on mat and it will
be interesting to see how their batsmen, after so many years away
from it, cope with turf pitches.
The US are not expected to be in the running for the two top
positions in Zone Two. In a competition like the Red Stripe Bowl,
however, they could have a good day, knock off one of the big three,
and stop them from going on to Kaiser.
Let's hope it is not Jamaica. That would be ironic, not only because
of the presence of Rohan Alexander, Dave Wallace, Dave Hoilette and
Garfield Williams, but also because the US is led by none other than
Richard Staple - the former Jamaica batsman who showed so much
promise, never fulfilled that promise, went off to the US in
disappointment and probably has something to prove.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)