Gloucestershire look thin without Barnett on top (29 August 1999)
Far too often, the NatWest Trophy final, traditionally played on the first Saturday in September, has offered much and delivered little
01-Jan-1970
29 August 1999
Gloucestershire look thin without Barnett on top
Michael Henderson
Far too often, the NatWest Trophy final, traditionally played on
the first Saturday in September, has offered much and delivered
little. There have been too many poor (that is, one-sided)
matches in recent years than is good for the reputation of the
senior knock-out cup, notably last year when Lancashire beat
Derbyshire, and the rain, over two thin days.
Tomorrow, when the game is played on Sunday for the first time,
it ought to be different. For a start, the match has been brought
forward by a week, which should diminish, however slightly, the
advantage of winning the toss and bowling first on a dewy
morning. "Win the toss, win the game" is not a faultless axiom
but it is not far out.
It is also the first final to be played over 50 overs, instead of
the usual 60, which is to be regretted. The additional 10 overs
gave this competition a feature that set it apart. Now the
original one-day competition is like everything else, part of the
pattern in the lino.
Somerset and Gloucestershire, who make up the first West Country
final, should make Lord's a lively place. Somerset have not been
to Lord's since 1983, when they won this competition. Before
three weeks ago, when they won the Benson and Hedges Super Cup,
Gloucestershire were last there as winners of the Benson and
Hedges Cup in 1977, having won the old Gillette Cup four years
earlier. It is a big day for both clubs.
The Super Cup, in fairness, was not very super. It was a sop to
those counties who finished in the top eight of last year's
championship, and it was not highly regarded by players,
spectators or the wider public. The fact that Gloucestershire
beat Yorkshire by 124 runs gave them cause for celebration but it
was a minor bauble, not a major prize.
To win the NatWest Trophy would be much more significant, and
would go some way towards assuaging Gloucestershire's
embarrassment of starting next season in the second division of
the reconstituted championship.
Their chances of beating Somerset will increase substantially if
Kim Barnett is fit enough to open the batting. Barnett, 39,
missed the championship match at Leicester that ended yesterday
with tonsilitis, and he was placed in quarantine.
In the semi-final against Yorkshire at Bristol, which
Gloucestershire won by six runs, Barnett made a brilliant 98 on a
slow pitch, providing the platform for the team's total. At the
end of his first year with the club, after switching from
Derbyshire, a fit Barnett is bound to be a central figure in the
match.
If he plays it will be his second successive appearance in this
final. Last year he opened the innings for Derbyshire when
Lancashire bowled them out for 108. Barnett also played for
Derbyshire, as a 21-year-old colt, in 1981 when the Peakites beat
Northamptonshire in the first final to be sponsored by NatWest.
He's been around for a long time.
There is a former Derbyshire batsman in the other side, too.
Peter Bowler has now been with Somerset since 1995 and, three
years younger than Barnett at 36, he hasn't much further to
travel on cricket's highway.
For two years Bowler led Somerset, as he wanted to lead
Derbyshire, but he now plays under Jamie Cox, who has brought to
the club the qualities they were looking for when the call went
out to Tasmania to help them. Cox has been outstanding this
summer. His century against Surrey in the semi-final of this
competition was merely the most outward sign of his contribution
and it is not least because of his leadership that Somerset begin
tomorrow as favourites.
There are other players keen to leave their mark. Andrew Caddick,
who has returned to the Test team with some success, will strive
to make the day his own, and Rob Turner, the wicketkeeperbatsman, is typical of the county player who has waited years for
the chance to stand on a big stage. Expect Somerset to win,
though it might not be by much.
Team Details
Gloucestershire (from): KJ Barnett, THC Hancock, RC
Russell, RJ Cunliffe, *MW Alleyne, IJ Harvey, JN Snape, MGN
Windows, MCJ Ball, MJ Cawdron, AM Smith, J Lewis, BW Gannon.
Somerset (from): *J Cox, PD Bowler, PCL Holloway, M Burns,
ME Trescothick, +RJ Turner, KA Parsons, JID Kerr, PS Jones, AR
Caddick, PW Jarvis, GD Rose, MPL Bulbeck.
Umpires: DR Shepherd & NT Plews
3rd Umpire: MJ Kitchen.
3rd Umpire: MJ Kitchen.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)