The discipline and determination so evident from the
start of the series have earned the West Indies a genuine chance of a
stimulating victory on the last day of the second Cable & Wireless
Test against South Africa today. They have remained resolute
throughout four days of tense, enthralling cricket against opponents
whose record justifies their rating as second only to Australia among
Test cricket's elite.
The simple equation that confronts them is that they require exactly
200 more to achieve their goal of 232 with nine wickets in tact on a
hard, dry pitch slow enough to render free scoring and incisive
bowling impossible.
In other words, the team that is more patient and makes fewer mistakes
will prevail.
After bowling South Africa out for 287 in their second innings behind
the example of the peerless 500 Man, Courtney Walsh, the West Indies
were left 11 potentially fraught overs to start their quest at the end
of the day.
They lost opener Wavell Hinds, lbw on the backfoot to Jacques Kallis
second ball to yet another questionable umpiring verdict in a match
featuring too many of them.
They would have also started this morning without Hinds partner Chris
Gayle but for Daryll Cullinan's high, two-handed miss at first slip
off a top-edged slash from Shaun Pollock.
But the tall, forthright Gayle and the nightwatchman, Dinanath
Ramnarine, another left-hander, survived to be 32 for one going into
the remaining 90 overs.
The challenge is far from straightforward in a match in which runs
have come at less than two and a half an over. But they have played
throughout this match, as in the first draw in Georgetown, with a
purpose never evident in Australia.
It is an attitude they seem to reserve for home Tests.
They may be heartened by the examples of Kensington, 1999, when Brian
Lara led them to 311 in their second innings for an amazing triumph
over Australia, and of the Antigua Recreation Ground last year when
their dogged captain, Jimmy Adams, carried them to 216 to beat
Pakistan.
They will take victory however it comes but they would rather it is
less stressful than those two occasions when nine wickets were down,
Walsh was at the wicket and, in the last case, they got the benefit of
an umpiring error.
Walsh himself has done enough on his last appearance at the Queen's
Park not to be saddled with that responsibility.
Should the revamped West Indies team, under its new captain, Carl
Hooper, achieve the goal it would be a welcome stimulant to our
cricket less than two months after the humiliating 5-0 thrashing in
Australia.
The West Indies gained the initiative on the third day when wicketkeeper Ridley Jacobs unbeaten 93 prompted 92 from their last two
wickets for a significant first innings lead of 56.
They maintained it yesterday with bowling of such tight control and
ground fielding so slick that South Africa were restricted to 22 runs
off 22 overs for the loss of a vital wicket in the hour and a quarter
after lunch.
It was the defining period of the day, possibly the match.
Inevitably, the indefatigable Walsh set the example as he has
repeatedly done throughout his 129 Tests.
On the previous afternoon, he had become the first man to reach the
peak of the bowling Everest of 500 wickets. He spent most of the
evening receiving messages of congratulations from presidents, prime
ministers and the grateful people of the Caribbean.
He returned to Queen's Park yesterday to complete the job, adding four
wickets to his 499th and 500th of the previous day as South Africa's
vaunted lower order again buckled in the face of the pressure.
The last six wickets could only muster 83. In their only completed
innings in the drawn Bourda Test, they went for 58, in the first
innings here they yielded a mere 65.
Walsh's figures were six for 61 from 36 peerless overs, the first time
he has taken so many in a Test innings at Queen's Park in what he is
adamant is his farewell match on the ground. He had four for 21 from
20 overs on the day.
He and his colleagues were kept waiting an hour and a half for their
first success but heads never dropped, shoulders never drooped, the
fielding never slackened.
Opener Herschelle Gibbs and Daryll Cullinan continued from South
Africa's overnight 130 for two and were proceeding at a comfortable,
if unhurried, rate when Cullinan paid the price for a wild swing at
leg-spinner Dinanath Ramnarine.
The shot was aimed somewhere over long-on. Instead, the leg-break
found an outside edge that skewed a catch to point.
He followed his 103 of the first innings with 73 spread over four
hours, five minutes and 178 balls. It was the third successive time he
had fallen to Ramnarine, confirming reports of his dislike of such
bowlers.
Cullinan and Gibbs put on 149 and, after they were separated, the West
Indies regained the advantage. Ramnarine should have removed Neil
McKenzie fourth ball but Lara at slip couldn't hold a low catch to his
right off an uncertain edge.
The reprieve only allowed McKenzie to struggle for timing and form
that increased pressure on those at the opposite end.
Gibbs' patience ran out when he pulled Walsh straight to Shivnarine
Chanderpaul, substitituing for Ramnaresh Sarwan at squareleg, after
labouring five hours, 50 minutes over 87.
The left-handed Lance Klusener, always a threat, sliced the impressive
Dillon off the topedge to first slip after a brief stay and the second
new ball, taken after tea and entrusted to Walsh and Dillon, wrapped
up the innings with the last five wickets for 47.
McKenzie's tortured 25 off 134 balls ended with a catch to the keeper
off Dillon who then passed Mark Boucher's wanton pull shot to hit offstump.
Walsh claimed wickets four, five and six or, put another way, 503, 504
and 505 with a keeper's catch to account for the left-handed Nicky
Boje, a clearcut lbw decision against Allan Donald and the underedge
of Pollock's bat that dragged the ball back into the stumps.
He led the team off the field for the last time to the cheers of a
grateful crowd.
It was now up to the batsmen.