Glimmers in the gloom
Zimbabwe cricket in 2007 featured some consolation wins and a new coach. At the board, though, the usual politicking reigned.
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Only in Zimbabwe can a 21-year-old be almost a veteran, but Brendan Taylor has been in and out of the side for four years. That he has talent is unquestioned, but too often his own indiscipline has let him down, and his form was not helped by having to stand in as wicketkeeper during Taibu's absence. In May 2007 he stuck two fingers up at the board's order not to play abroad and headed for Europe. It was hardly his first brush with authority. But in August he sauntered back, and weeks later played a breathtakingly mature innings to help beat Australia. Ricky Ponting said that he wished Australia's top three had batted like Taylor. If he can control himself off the field, then he could go far. It's a big if.
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Peter Chingoka, international cricket's senior administrator, has used his friends within the ICC to survive some intense flak in recent years, but his time appears to be running out. Serious questions over his role in accounts described by Speed as "deliberately falsified" rumble on, and there is a growing suspicion that he has gone from being a real asset to Zimbabwe within the ICC to a growing liability. On the personal front it's been a bad year for him as he was barred from entering the UK in October because of his political affiliations with the Mugabe regime. With some of his family based in the UK, it was widely thought that was where he would settle when his tenure within ZC ended.
The scenes of delirium in Cape Town when Zimbabwe bloodied the noses of the Australians in their opening match in the World Twenty20 in September will live in the memory for a long time. And it was no fluke. Australia paid for an almost cockily laidback approach to the new competition, and Zimbabwe outplayed them in every department. Only in the final overs, as Ricky Ponting grew increasingly flustered, did Australia look like hauling Zimbabwe in, but Taylor kept his head and Zimbabwe scored the 12 they needed off the last over with a ball to spare. One swallow doesn't make a summer but it sure makes you feel better about the world.
Zimbabwe Cricket. While most countries rely on their boards to foster the game, ZC often seems to be at war with its stakeholders and players. Despite having banished anyone critical of him, Chingoka remains under almost constant sniper fire, and the accounts affair could be the chink in his armour. The low of the year came when ZC banned anyone other than hand-picked appointees from attending the AGM, lest they pose any difficult questions. That meant that several life presidents and vice-presidents were unceremoniously stripped of their offices just because the honour entitled them to attend the AGM. That almost all of them were former colleagues of Chingoka mattered not a jot.
A tough call. Performances have certainly improved under Brown and there is a solid core of players who are learning all the time in one-day cricket. It is unlikely they will win a series, but if they can be more competitive and nick the odd win here and there, then that will rightly be seen as progress. They are as far away from regaining Test status as they have ever been, and it would be a huge mistake to expose them to five-day matches, as they simply lack the bowling skills or the batting technique to cope. Off the field, Chingoka and his unloved sidekick Ozias Bvute may well finally depart, but it is possible that those replacing them will be even more unbending. Worryingly, the year ended with rumblings about hardliners seeking to play the race card once more. In Zimbabwe, however, cricket is dependent on what happens in the country itself, and so 2008 promises to be another very hard year.
Steven Price is a freelance journalist based in Harare