New test for Scots (18 Apr 1997)
IT`S true
18-Apr-1997
Friday 18 April 1997
New test for Scots
By Robert Philip
IT`S true. I kid you not. When cricket`s next World Cup is staged
in England in four years, Group B will comprise: Australia,
West Indies, Pakistan, New Zealand, Bangladesh and, wait
for it . . . Scotland.
While the prospect of Rab C Nesbitt and friends marching
on Lord`s may cause apoplexy in the Long Room, it should not be
forgotten that the Scots have a rich cricketing tradition
stretching back through Mike Denness to Douglas Jardine.
Now led by former England opener Jim Love, Scotland qualified
for the 1999 competition by finishing third in the ICC Trophy in
Kuala Lumpur, even though Bob Crampsey - Glaswegian writer,
broadcaster, Brain of Britain and Somerset CCC member for 42
years - places the current Tartan XI alongside Cornwall in terms
of global might.
Crampsey attended his first cricket match in 1955 when he was in
the RAF. "I saw Lancashire beat Somerset by 10 wickets and
that was me smitten. Given my love of the underdog, if Lancashire
had been beaten, I suppose I would have become a member at
Old Trafford," he said.
Denness and Jardine apart, Scotland have produced a steady
trickle of fine players; Glasgow Rangers goalkeeper Andy
Goram would undoubtedly be one of the bowlers come the World Cup
had his football bosses not insisted he give up the game, and,
according to Crampsey, legendary Rangers manager and
international wing-half Scot Symon took five for 33 against
Don Bradman`s 1938 Australians.
Mostly, however, the side have been bolstered with the inclusion
of `overseas` players such as West Indians Malcolm Marshall,
Gordon Greenidge and Rohan Kanhai.
Another Caribbean visitor who joined a local club as professional
recalls the warmth of his welcome in Glasgow. "The first
week I was there the club captain invited me round to his
home to `share the family`s Sunday joint`. It was nice enough but
where I come from, a joint comes in a cigarette paper, not in
a sea of gravy."
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/)