Lara the record holder returns to haunt Durham (17 April 1998)
THE Brian Lara show moved back into town yesterday, and the West Indian's return was all the more poignant in that Warwickshire's first championship opponents today are Durham at Edgbaston
17-Apr-1998
17 April 1998
Lara the record holder returns to haunt Durham
By Charles Randall
THE Brian Lara show moved back into town yesterday, and the West
Indian's return was all the more poignant in that Warwickshire's
first championship opponents today are Durham at Edgbaston.
Lara arrived unexpectedly in Birmingham's chill from Trinidad
yesterday as Warwickshire hastily reconvened a press conference
for their new leader, having been under the impression he had
missed his flight.
On June 6 four years ago at this ground against Durham, Lara
completed his 501 not out, his sixth hundred for Warwickshire in
seven innings and the highest first-class score in the world.
This time the only record the Trinidadian is likely to break is
the number of sweaters he wears when he leads the bookmakers'
favourites on to the field.
That 1994 pitch was reported by the umpires as being too good
for batting - very unlikely this time around - and the fact that
one Durham player, John Morris, recorded a double-hundred and
four team-mates scored 60s is almost forgotten, though certainly
not by David Graveney, the chairman of England's selectors, who
scored one of them.
Durham have grown stronger since then, and a knee injury to
Simon Brown has left Morris as the sole survivor of the drawn
1994 match. "We've progressed a lot with youngsters coming
through and a great captain in David Boon," said Morris this
week. "Lara could be in for a shock."
Dennis Amiss, Warwickshire's chief executive, said the players
still talked about the 501 match, but he added: "There are no
easy matches. Durham start with a clean slate and we've got to
be focused."
Tim Munton, Warwickshire's England swing-bowler, will not be
risked after injury, and Ashley Giles, the England A spinner,
and Gladstone Small might not be fit. Ed Giddins makes his
seam-bowling debut after his suspension for drug use and
dismissal from Sussex in 1996.
There should be plenty of time for cricket quiz questions as
rain threatens the weekend's play. So try this: Which two
Gloucestershire players made their debut in last year's Ashes
series, making identical scores - nought and four not out - and
failing to take a wicket?
Mike Smith, with 78 championship wickets last season, springs to
mind but it is easy to forget Shaun Young's call-up by Australia
at the Oval. Another question could be how well Smith's accurate
left-armers might have fared in the West Indies in the light of
Angus Fraser's success.
Courtney Walsh has replaced Young at Gloucestershire this
season, flying in from Jamaica on Wednesday before driving
through snow to Bristol in time for the first of his testimonial
dinners.
Glamorgan visit Bristol today to open the defence of their title
without Waqar Younis, who is with Pakistan. But this could mean
a championship debut for Simon Jones, son of Jeff, the former
England fast-bowler.
Kent, Middlesex's opponents, are hesitating over Carl Hooper,
who is not due to arrive at Gatwick from the Caribbean until
7.30am this morning. Mike Atherton plays his first match for
Lancashire as a former England captain at Hove with John Crawley
as captain in the absence of Wasim Akram.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)