NatWest Trophy final: Weather the worry as fascinating duel looms (5 Sep 1998)
UMBRELLAS and prayer mats may be needed at Lord's today, as well as picnic lunches
05-Sep-1998
5 September 1998
NatWest Trophy final: Weather the worry as fascinating duel looms
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
UMBRELLAS and prayer mats may be needed at Lord's today, as well
as picnic lunches. The NatWest final between Lancashire and
Derbyshire is too good a game in prospect to be ruined by the
weather but the forecast is for showers, at best. Moisture in the
air can be doubly bad news, threatening not just hold-ups in play
but the sort of batting failures which make for anticlimax,
writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
The good news is that today's will almost certainly be the last
final to be staged in September. On next year's proposed fixture
list, currently being studied by the counties, the final is
firmly fixed for Aug 28. The extra week should make a significant
difference, allowing the authorities to consider an 11 o'clock
start rather than the notorious dewy beginning at 10.30 and, if
recent weather trends continue, giving a much better chance of
the sunny day for which eager players and fervent spectators
yearn.
A full house is expected today and so, too, is a decent contest
between the most successful club since the knockout cup started
and a raggle-taggle combination of gnarled veterans and
fresh-faced tyros whose plan is to slay their third giant in a
row. Against Surrey and Leicestershire, away from home on each
occasion, Derbyshire overcame the odds and the manner in which
they fiddled their way in the later stages to a three-run win at
Grace Road simply underlined how impossible to predict these
60-over games can be.
A personal duel within the main contest lends added piquancy
today, between Wasim Akram, a great bowling all-rounder, and
Dominic Cork, an inspirational one. Derbyshire announced only
this week that Cork, whom many considered to be an extraordinary
choice for the captaincy after the bitter internal dissension of
1997, will lead the club again next year. By contrast, Wasim is
aware of speculation about possible alternative overseas players
- Muttiah Muralitharan or the Australian leg-spinner Stuart
MacGill. He will not lack motivation.
Kevin Dean, like Wasim a left-arm opening bowler, whose genuine
inswinger and 65 first-class wickets this season must have made
him a close contender for the England A tour, is expected to have
recovered from injury sufficiently to take the new ball for
Derbyshire. If Cork is in one of his swinging, rather than
hitting the deck, moods, the prospect of a cloudy morning and a
lost toss, especially with Phillip DeFreitas in Derbyshire's
attack against his former colleagues, should be sufficient to
create anxiety even in a team as accomplished as Lancashire's.
This, nonetheless, might be the best chance of a really close
final. Lancashire have to be strong favourites on paper, because
of their enviable record on the big occasion at Lord's - this is
their 10th Gillette or NatWest final and they have won six of
them - and because of the mature accomplishment of their current
team. Neil Fairbrother will be appearing in his 10th Lord's
final, breaking David Hughes's record, and Mike Watkinson would
be doing so, too, if he were to get a place in the eleven. He was
standing by yesterday as a possible replacement for Mike
Atherton, whose suspect back is still causing him some pain.
Mark Chilton, who has a good record in one-day cricket for
Lancashire and the British Universities, is the alternative. He
is a stylish batsman who can also bowl medium-paced wobblers of
the kind Kim Barnett and Vince Clarke produced in the late stages
of the semi-final to deny Leicestershire when they had needed
only 56 from 12 overs with six wickets standing.
The fact that the game is to be played on one of the Lord's
strips which has not yet been relaid adds to the possibility that
some of the lesser considered bowlers - including, perhaps,
Lancashire's experienced off-spinner, Gary Yates - will play a
significant part. Before being put to bed beneath the hovercover
as the clouds arrived yesterday, the pitch looked white but it
will not be so pacy as the ones produced for the big occasions so
far this season.
Part of the charm of finals staged as leaves begin to curl and
players to remember their mortality is the possibility that great
cricketers may be appearing on a major stage for the last time.
Wasim made it clear yesterday that he does not want to leave
Lancashire: "I've had two offers from other counties but I want
to stay . . . I regard Lancashire as my home." He is only 32 and
has led from the front this year, but two different injuries have
troubled him.
For Derbyshire, even Kim Barnett cannot go on forever. For all
his unorthodox stance, he is a batsman with a wonderful eye who
obeys the essentials and if he could get a start with a partner
as brilliant as Michael Slater, Derbyshire will have every
chance, even against a Lancashire eleven of whom eight are going
on one or more of the England winter tours. The most unexpected
of the chosen eight, Graham Lloyd, promptly made 212 not out in
under five hours as Lancashire beat their opponents today by an
innings in the championship match which ended, to the relief of
both sides, on Thursday.
The side batting first have won 10 of the last 11 September
finals but this should be the last when the toss at least
threatens to be decisive.
Lancashire's Andrew Flintoff, 20, was last night unveiled as the
Cricket Writers' Club's young player of the year after beating
off competition from eight other candidates.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)