The Busta Cup may be the most important first-class tournament in the
Caribbean, but the 2002 edition will see few Test stars and fewer
promising juniors take the field. While the international players
depart for Sharjah even as the competition begins, the under-19
cricketers are already in New Zealand fighting it out for the junior
World Cup title.
The absence of the leading lights, however, should not prevent the Cup
from being a tight-fought contest, a forum for emerging players to
establish themselves and call the attention of national selectors to
themselves. Defending champions Barbados, for example, include ex-Test
cricketers Philo Wallace, Floyd Reifer and Courtney Browne, all of
whom will be looking to break into the national side once again.
Following the unique inclusion of a non-regional side in the
tournament last year, the cricket authorities are all set to try it
again. After England 'A' in 2001, it is the turn of the Bangladesh
second-stringers to try their hand at some Caribbean cricket. This is
likely to prove invaluable for Bangladesh cricket, for their Test and
one-day performances at the international level thus far have shown a
serious paucity of experience.
The opening match will see Barbados take on runners-up Guyana at the
Kensington Oval. Guyana finished on the same number of points as
Barbados but relinquished the trophy due to their fewer victories.
Along with Jamaica, the winners of the inaugural Busta International
Shield last year, Barbados and Guyana are the top contenders for the
championship this year.
A round-robin league competition will be followed by the first four
teams competing in two semi-finals for a right to play in the final...