13 January 1999
King may wear cap
By Tony Cozier
CAPE TOWN - Reon King flies in to Johannesburg tomorrow morning,
more than a week after his presence was requested by the West
Indies tour management and less than 24 hours before the fifth
and final Test against South Africa in which he seems certain to
play.
"We had asked for King to come out when Curtly Ambrose broke
down in the fourth Test and it was clear Franklyn Rose's
shoulder problem wasn't improving as fast as we thought," team
manager Clive Lloyd said yesterday of the fast bowler who is one
of four new players coming for the series of seven One-Day
Internationals.
"Apparently, there was some difficulty in locating him and we
were also told he could only be a replacement for someone who
returned home," he said.
Lloyd indicated that King, who toured South Africa last season
with the West Indies "A" team, would be fast-tracked into the
Test team at Centurion Park, Pretoria, on Friday morning.
He said Courtney Walsh is almost fully recovered from his
hamstring strain that kept him out of the fourth Test, but while
Ambrose is "making good progress" after a similar injury
sustained in the fourth Test he was unlikely to be risked.
"Curtly has been chosen for the One-Day series and we wouldn't
want to rush him back into a Test if we're not sure he's fit
enough to get through it," Lloyd said.
"We'll obviously see what conditions are like at Centurion
before deciding on the starting XI but King will definitely be
considered."
Centurion is reputably favourable to fast bowling and King took
eight wickets (five for 63 and three for 69) for the "A" team
against a President's XI there.
Why Rose was not despatched earlier so that he could receive
intensive treatment on an injury sustained two weeks ago in the
third Test is as unclear as why King was not sent out as his
replacement when requested so he could be better prepared for
the final Test.
It is another example of the administrative bung-ling that has
corresponded with the inept performances on the field throughout
the tour.
King will be joined by Keith Arthurton, the 32-year-old utility
left-hander, Neil McGarrell, the left-arm spinner, and the
28-year-old Keith Semple, who owes his surprise selection to his
all-round performances in the three representative one-day
matches for the "A" team in India.
Run out for nought in the first match, Semple followed with
scores of 27 and 69 not out and bowled his full allocation of 10
overs in each match at an economy rate of 2.6 runs an over. He
is excellent in the field.
Semple is one of four changes in the team that reached the final
of the Wills International Cup in Bangladesh in October.
It represents a strange lack of continuity in what should be a
steady build-up to the World Cup in England in May and June.
Daren Ganga, whose method and inexperience are not suited to the
demands of the limited-overs game; Floyd Reifer, who has found
South African conditions as difficult on this tour as he did
with the "A" team, and Junior Murray, the reserve wicket-keeper
to whom fielding is an obviously unfamiliar discipline, are the
others who were not in Bangladesh.
The four who were there but have now given way are Merv Dillon,
Clayton Lambert and Stuart Williams, in addition to the injured
Rose.
Dillon has generally bowled with better control throughout the
tour than any of the younger fast bowlers. Williams has a record
in One-Day Internationals comparable with most (average 35.76 in
46 matches, higher than Carl Hooper and Shivnarine Chanderpaul).
Lambert at least knows that it's like to score a hundred in one.
In addition, Dillon and Williams are two of the finest fielders
in the team.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)