Junior Murray gets nod (27 January 1999)
The West Indies change their opening pairing here today for the sixth time in eight matches against South Africa this tour, reverting to Junior Murray to go in first with Shivnarine Chanderpaul for the third of the seven one-day internationals, under
27-Jan-1999
27 January 1999
Junior Murray gets nod
Tony Cozier
The West Indies change their opening pairing here today for the sixth
time in eight matches against South Africa this tour, reverting to
Junior Murray to go in first with Shivnarine Chanderpaul for the
third of the seven one-day internationals, under the lights.
Philo Wallace, as short of confidence as he is of runs, was
predictably dropped at the selection meeting last night but who
should open in his stead occupied most of the two hours manager Clive
Lloyd, coach Malcolm Marshall, captain Brian Lara and vice-captain
Carl Hooper spent discussing the order.
Lara indicated his willingness to fill the position in which he first
made his mark in the 1992 World Cup and where he scored his early
hundreds in the shortened form of the game. His fellow selectors were
concerned the effect his early loss would have on the remainder of
the batting and it was finally determined he should remain at No.4.
The experiment of using Nixon McLean as the big-hitter to utilise the
field restrictions over the first 15 overs would be maintained
unless, for a change, the openers see of the threat of Shaun Pollock
with the new ball. In that case, Lara would appear at No.3.
Daren Ganga, the 20-year-old who is yet to appear in a one-day
international, was another option for the role but manager Lloyd said
last night that Murray's experience tipped the balance in his favour
for a crucial match.
The series is level 1-1 following the first major West Indies'
victory of their wretched tour in the second match in East London on
Sunday by 43 runs.
The only feasible explanation for Murray's retention in the one-day
squad following the Test series was as an additional opening batsman,
a makeshift role he filled in the third and fourth Tests. He is the
reserve wicket-keeper to Ridley Jacobs who was certain of his place
and neither of the two specialist openers, Stuart Williams and
Clayton Lambert, were kept on.
First used in the position in the World Series tournament in
Australia two seasons ago when Robert Samuels and Adrian Griffith
weren't measuring up, Murray immediately made an impact with 86 off
79 balls in a victory over Pakistan that helped spark a West Indies
revival.
He had two other half-centuries but was then omitted for the series
against India and Sri Lanka in the Caribbean. Today will be only his
second one-day international since Australia. He played in the first
against England at Kensington Oval last in which he was injured and
replaced by Jacobs.
The other ten are unchanged from the first two matches in which the
West Indies have shown appreciably more intensity than they did in
the Tests.
Keith Arthurton and Neil McGarrell, two of the new players, have
given a new sharpness to the fielding, Reon King has bowled superbly
with the new ball in support of Curtly Ambrose and Chanderpaul and
Carl Hooper have enjoyed the relief of not being confronted with the
attacking close fields of the Tests.
Chanderpaul's 150 in the second match was a masterpiece. There are
not many scores of that magnitude in one-day cricket compiled off as
few balls as 136 and yet without a single six. The nimble left-hander
used classical strokeplay - principally pulls, cuts and drives -
along the fast outfield to gather 20 boundaries and a genuine edge of
the brilliant Pollock for one of them was his only false stroke.
The South Africans have been shaken by the closeness of the opening
match, which they won off the final ball through some strange tactics
by Lara, and their defeat in the second.
Their 100 per cent successes in winning the Commonwealth Games Gold
Medal in Kuala Lumpur and the Wills International Cup in Bangladesh
emphasised their strength in the shorter game based on their
all-round depth and sparkling fielding. Coach Bob Woolmer said the
results were a blessing in disguise in the buildup to the World Cup,
making them realise that they are not invincible.
They are also shuffling at the top of the order where Gary Kirsten
(twice), Herschelle Gibbs and Mike Rindel have all gone cheaply,
putting pressure on the lower order. There is now talk of Daryl
Cullinan going in first as he did in the Bangladesh tournament.
The match is a sell-out with a crowd of 21,000 anticipated in
conditions that ground curator Philip Russell, the former Derbyshire
county player, predicted yesterday would be ideal of batting.
The teams:
West Indies: Brian Lara (captain), Shivnarine Chanderpaul,
Junior Murray, Nixon McLean, Carl Hooper, Keith Arthurton, Keith
Semple, Ridley Jacobs, Neil McGarrell, Curtly Ambrose, Reon King.
South Africa (expected): Hansie Cronje (captain), Gary Kirsten,
Herschelle Gibbs, Daryll Cullinan, Jacques Kallis, Jonty Rhodes, Dale
Benkenstein, Shaun Pollock, Mark Boucher, Lance Klusener and Nicky
Boje.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)