The PPP Healthcare County Championship officially ended on
Saturday and the three Indians had some decidedly mixed
fortunes in the competition. With 1039 runs at 49.47 in 15
games, Rahul Dravid was fourth in the Division One aggregate
and seventh in the averages. But he would have been
disappointed with his form in the latter half of the season,
accruing a modest 300 runs in his last 12 innings as opposed
to 739 in his first 12. Nevertheless Dravid easily emerged as
Kent's premier batsman, although the team itself finished
sixth in Division One, just about staving off relegation.
Saurav Ganguly was not in his elements in the Championship,
producing 644 runs at 33.89 in 13 matches with six fifties but
no hundred. He was a disappointing sixth in the Lancashire
averages although only Neil Fairbrother and John Crawley
scored more runs than he did. Lancashire finished second in
the Championship for the third year running, 20 points adrift
of champions Surrey. The tradition of no overseas pro from
India ever being associated with a County Championship winning
team thus continued. Ganguly, who was forced to endure murmurs
of discontent over his commitment, rounded off with scores of
54 and 65 in his last bow against Surrey earlier this week.
In his second stint in county cricket, Anil Kumble was not the
unqualified success he proved to be with Northamptonshire in
1995. In 12 games, Kumble scalped 45 wickets at 25.17 but he
was put in the shade by other overseas spinning recruits like
Saqlain Mushtaq (66 wickets at 15.39 in 12 matches) and Shane
Warne (70 wickets at 23.14 in 15 matches). Kumble pipped new
ball bowler James Ormond at the head of the county averages as
Leicestershire finished fourth in the final Division One
standings. He had the minor satisfaction of scoring a first
ever fifty in two seasons of county cricket following which he
was forced to shave off his moustache by overzealous
teammates.
In the one-day competitions, it was a different story for
Ganguly who displayed supreme touch with the bat although his
running between the wickets in a National League game against
Kent did not get full marks. The National League saw him run
up 547 runs at 54.7 in 12 games including two hundreds and
four fifties. The Indian captain's form failed to buck
Lancashire's fortunes and with one game in hand the county is
languishing at the bottom of the first division, having to
taste the bitter pill of relegation. In the same competition,
Dravid with 428 runs at 42.8 in 12 games and Kumble with 16
wickets at 21.62 in the same number of games went about their
job with quiet efficiency. Leicestershire are currently tied
for 4th and 5th spots and have managed to avoid relegation but
Kent are teetering on the brink and need to win their final
game on Sunday to avoid falling into the second rung next
year.
In the NatWest Trophy, Ganguly was again in sparkling form
with 272 runs at 90.66 in four fixtures but he came a cropper
in the game which mattered the most, the semifinal against
Gloucestershire. Ganguly fell for 4 as Lancashire, chasing
249, were cleaned up for 150. Both Kent and Leicestershire
fell by the wayside in the fourth round, Dravid making 76 in
two games at 38.00 and Kumble bagging six wickets at ten
apiece also in two games.
The third domestic limited overs competition, the Benson and
Hedges Cup, ended in early June before the three Indians could
negotiate the cold, wet conditions with panache. Lancashire
were again the only side amongst the three to advance into the
quarters but their campaign was halted one round later by bete
noire Gloucestershire. Ganguly made 62 runs in 6 games at 12.4
but missed the semifinal showdown, having flown back for the
Asia Cup in Dhaka. Dravid's personal run tally stood at 50 in
2 matches at 25.00 and Kumble was the only one to acclimatise
himself quickly and potently enough to hook a catch of nine
wickets in four games at 10.66.