Mark Vermeulen on his maiden century and the Logan Cup match against Midlands
Mark Vermeulen recorded his maiden first-class century, 197, in the Logan Cup match against Midlands played at Kwekwe from 17 to 19 March this year
John Ward
30-Mar-2000
THE PLAYER'S VIEW: MARK VERMEULEN
Mark Vermeulen recorded his maiden first-class century, 197, in
the Logan Cup match against Midlands played at Kwekwe from 17 to
19 March this year. He talks to John Ward about that match.
JW: Mark, can you first of all describe the Kwekwe ground itself
for the match, please?
MV: The ground is a fairly average ground, looking in good
condition with all the rain that Zimbabwe has been getting. The
facilities there are pretty good: they have astroturf nets for
the academy they're trying to start up in the Midlands, and it's
looking very good.
It was very wet the day before and the whole ground was under
water. We were very lucky to start on that first morning. The
track did a bit early in the morning when we won the toss and
bowled first. It did a bit for the seamers, but only in the
first session, and it really flattened out from then on.
JW: They had a problem with their pitch earlier on in the
season, as you'll remember from the Academy's match against the
Sri Lankans.
MV: I don't actually know what was wrong with it - I think the
grass was dying or something like that. I think it's fine now,
good for a three-day game, though four-day cricket I think is the
way it should go for first-class cricket, for in three days you
struggle to get a result.
JW: So how did things go in their first innings?
MV: In their first innings they got 204, with our spinners doing
well, Ian Engelbrecht bowling especially well, and only one of
their batsman, Doug Marillier, came off, getting 133 of their
runs. That was the main effort for them. Doug's a good player;
he backs himself and likes to hit over the top if the ball is
there to hit. He likes to play his shots; he's a strokemaker.
We didn't tie him down enough for a long enough period for him to
make a false stroke. He played a good innings.
JW: And the Matabeleland innings?
MV: We had the last session to bat on the first day and we were
82 for four that evening, so we were in lots of trouble, having
lost most of our top order. Then the next day we lost some more
quick wickets early doors, and we were 165 for eight, before
Matthew Townshend and myself put on 112 for the ninth wicket.
JW: What was the situation when you yourself went in to bat?
MV: There were only a few runs on the board when the first
wicket fell and I went in. The pitch wasn't really doing very
much and there was only David Mutendera who was bowling with any
pace; the other opening bowler wasn't all that quick. They
brought in Raymond Price pretty early, and he basically bowled
through the whole innings. I just started off slowly; after the
weekend before against Manicaland when I thought I was a bit
negative, just because it was a longer game, now what I try to do
is to back myself to hit the ball, and when I see it in the right
place to hit I'm going to play my shots. I've decided that if
the ball is in my area I'm going to play my shots, and that's
what I did. My first hundred took quite a long time, but my next
97 came off 50-odd balls.
JW: Did you have any idea you were close to 200?
MV: Yes, I did. It was on the scoreboard, I was on 197, but
then I flicked one off my legs, in the air but in front of
square, and backward square ran across, dived full length and
managed to hang on to it. If that had got past him it would have
been four runs. But that's the way it goes in cricket: you ride
your luck. I did have quite a few chances early on in my
innings, so I was quite fortunate to get to 197 anyway. So
getting out to a good catch at the end of the day probably
justifies it.
JW: What were your most memorable shots?
MV: I played a few nice shots over extra cover: I hit Raymond
Price over extra cover for six and the captain also over extra
cover for six. I also hit one nearly into the clubhouse, also
off the captain. I enjoyed my back-foot shots: I played two
back-foot drives off David Mutendera, and even the guys in the
slips came to me after the game and said, "Hey, you've got to
teach me how to play that shot." It was a back-foot forcing
drive which went through the covers for four, and even the guys
in the opposing team were impressed with that. Those were the
ones I enjoyed the most, the back-foot shots.
JW: And Midlands' second innings?
MV: Midlands went in 88 runs behind and Raymond Price stuck
around for about three hours, got himself 76. We managed to get
wickets on the other end. They managed to get to 282, which gave
them a lead of 294, but because it was a three-day match there
wasn't much time to knock off the runs, so we had to push the
runs. We went in needing about three an over, so we decided just
to consolidate before tea, but unfortunately we didn't score too
many runs. Then after tea, leaving us with just one session, we
needed four an over. So guys started trying to force the
run-rate and there were a few odd mistakes, a few good catches.
The game turned and they managed to bowl us all out. We lost our
last wicket in the last over. It was a good game.
The way I look at it is this is why we're struggling at the
highest level. We're not playing enough of this cricket, as you
say yesterday, Matabeleland v Mashonaland. 18 wickets fell in a
day, and really that's not good enough. That's why we've got to
be playing more and more of this cricket, because guys aren't
really used to playing the longer game. I think also from next
season there should be four home and away games, so you've got at
least eight first-class games, and a final, to make it nine or
ten games. That's the only way we're going to improve at the
highest level if we play longer cricket, four-day cricket, so the
batsmen can get in and not get their hundreds, but their
double-hundreds and maybe even their triple-hundreds.
JW: Midlands must have been over the moon, after two heavy
defeats and then an unexpected victory.
MV: They were very happy. They tried hard; they've got lots of
guts there, they've got a good team spirit and enjoy their
cricket, which is a good sign for them. They've also got a
couple of youngsters coming through, and if they keep working on
it, I'm sure guys will be going to the [CFX] Academy and then
coming back again, which is what they're trying to do with their
academy: send a couple from the province to the Academy, and when
they've finished their year they come back to their own province
and play their cricket there.
In Matabeleland we're struggling with our batting at the moment.
Because we've got a very young side, we don't know how to play
the longer game because it's all crash-boom-bang in Zimbabwe when
we're playing one-day cricket all the time. He's out there to
play his shots all the time from ball one, so that's where we've
struggled as a province, because we've not had the batsmen
batting for longer innings. They lose their concentration, and
that's where we fall down, because in most games we've bowled
sides out cheaply in the first innings and then we haven't been
able to capitalise with our batting. And that's where we're
falling short.
JW: In your innings yesterday [87], you looked to be batting
more confidently than I've ever seen you - most of the time.
Obviously that 197 helped.
MV: I'm just working hard, I'm playing straight mainly, keeping
it in the V because playing across the line is not really the way
to go, especially in the longer game. Just wait for the right
ball and then try to play straight down the ground; keep most of
it along the ground and basically, as I said, I'm trying to get
more positive, so that if the ball's there to hit I'm going to
hit it from now on, because I've had enough with just blocking.
It's no use just blocking it out, and at the end of the day it
doesn't matter how you score them, it's how many you score of
them, and that's what counts.
JW: Yesterday you got to about 80 and then you seemed to dry up.
MV: Actually what happened was that they started setting very
defensive fields to me; they started having sweepers out on the
leg side, so it was quite difficult for me to hit the boundaries
from then on. So I just said to my batting partner, "Let's just
work the ones and twos," and that's what we started doing. [Not
very successfully, though!] I'll be honest with you: my
dismissal, the ball before I looked and the fielder was about
twenty yards behind square, and I don't know whether he actually
moved during the ball or before the ball, but that's what
happened, because I purposely hit it in front of square because I
knew the fielder was behind square. And then when I looked up he
was in front of square, so I had been jooked out by the fielding
side there.