Kirsten stumped for answers (9 November 1998)
CENTURION - They may be dressed up with a fancy corporate name and train at a world class facility, but Northerns batsmen, with a few exceptions are still serving up the same old rubbish at A Section level
09-Nov-1998
9 November 1998
Kirsten stumped for answers
Trevor Chesterfield
CENTURION - They may be dressed up with a fancy corporate name and
train at a world class facility, but Northerns batsmen, with a few
exceptions are still serving up the same old rubbish at A Section
level.
This has been all to obvious yet again at SuperSport Centurion in a
series which carries the name of the pay channel and has the coach
Peter Kirsten, shaking his head and wondering about the ability of the
side he has inherited.
While Northerns fire well as a limited-overs unit and the dressing
room vibe reverberates around the venues where they play, there is a
different mind set when it comes to the four-day scenario. And, as the
coach so rightly points out, few sides can come back and win a game
after being dismissed for first innings totals of 97 and 116.
"You are just not competing if you are bowled out for such low first
innings totals," he admitted with candid frankness.
"I must admit than I am at a loss for words to explain it. Our
preparation has been good throughout but here we are having lost two
games.
"If you has suggested to me before we flew to Port Elizabeth 10 days
ago we would lose our first two A Section series games as badly as we
have I would have laughed," he said.
"Now we need to sit down and look at where we are going from here,
examine our options and plans," he said yesterday after Border beat
Northerns by 268 runs at Centurion after being bowled out for 200
within an hour on the final morning of the game.
Although Martin van Jaarsveld and Grant Morgan managed to stretch
their partnership to 67 for the seventh wicket, it was a little too
much like passive resistance as the lower order capitulated after Van
Jaarsveld departed for 110.
As with Keith Medlycott in his first season, Kirsten was quite frankly
stumped for the right answers. While there has been, as yet, no
mention of separate limited-overs and four-day squads that possibility
could emerge as the season progresses. Kirsten's next task on his
diary is to sit down and select a side to play Boland in Paarl as well
as the B side to play North West in the UCB Bowl at Centurion this
weekend.
"It's simple really: we need to bat better. To achieve that we have to
keep on working," he agreed.
Kirsten also admitted that the plan to go into four-day series games
with a four-pronged pace attack had been scrapped to strengthen the
batting. He had hoped that Mike Rindel, who scored his 5 000 first
class-runs for Northerns in this match against Border, and Steve
Elworthy would provide the substance needed. But this had not
materialised and had added to the pressure after the middle-order "was
blown away" on Sunday.
"It's been a difficult time. First leaving Mark Davis out and then
beefing up the batting didn't work. It's not easy as while there have
been some fine batting performances there is a need to get them
collectively," he commented.
"We need to have players scoring runs more consistently and building
bigger first innings scores than we are," he said in reference to the
scores against Eastern Province and Border. "If we are to be
competitive it is a problem we just have to solve."
Kirsten did not plan to make too many changes for the game against
Paarl where a slow pitch might mean looking for an extra spinner with
perhaps Quentin Still being considered and there is also the option of
Deon Jordaan as an opener.
Source :: Trevor Chesterfield, Pretoria News