Nortel Semi: Crab Hill showdown (27 July 1999)
Hosts Barbados will have a tough assignment against Jamaica in a semifinal of the Nortel West Indies Under-19 cricket tournament starting today
01-Jan-1970
27 July 1999
Nortel Semi: Crab Hill showdown
The Barbados Nation
Hosts Barbados will have a tough assignment against Jamaica in a
semifinal of the Nortel West Indies Under-19 cricket tournament
starting today.
Barbados and Jamaica will journey to the North Stars Sports Club
ground, Crab Hill, St. Lucy, while Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago
square off at Queen's Park in the other semifinal.
Even though the young Barbadians are at home and will have patriotic
crowd support, most of the players will actually be having their first
outing at the North Stars ground, which is not a regular venue for
matches in the Barbados Cricket Association's competitions.
Both teams have minor injury worries surrounding a key player, with
the Barbados camp hoping that captain and leading batsman Ryan Hinds
is fully fit after a groin strain kept him from fielding on
Sunday. Manager Darnley Boxill said that all players were now
available for selection.
Hinds, who played in this year's Busta Cup regional first-class
competition, has been in outstanding form with scores of 124, 42 and
91 in his three innings for an average of 128.50.
Left-handed opener Jason Haynes, who is averaging 57.50, is the only
other Barbadian front-line batsman who has been among the runs
consistently.
Hinds and Haynes will need to play significant roles against the
penetrative Jamaican bowling attack, which is spearheaded by fiery
fast bowler Germaine Lawson.
'Hinds has shown that he is a class above the rest,' said Boxill. 'It
is good to see him dominating at this level and his captaincy is
coming on as well.'
Lawson has taken a tournament-high 21 wickets at 8.71 runs apiece,
including a ten-wicket match haul in Jamaica's victory in one day
against Canada, when he claimed a hat-trick.
His new-ball partner, Kamal Dennis, did not bowl in Canada's second
innings after sustaining a soft tissue injury to his heel, but team
manager Lynden Wright said he would be fit to take his place in the
side.
These two will be supported by all-rounder Marlon Samuels, whose
off-spin bowling has earned him 11 wickets at 10.54 runs each,
leg-spinner Kevin Peart and left-arm spinner Barrington Bartley.
Jamaica's batting has centred around the aggressive Samuels, who has
been in excellent form, averaging 81.00 with knocks of 48, 65, 104 not
out and 26. He will be supported by tall opener Brenton Parchment, who
is averaging a healthy 64.50 from two completed innings, and his
partner Glenmore Hall.
Jamaica's heavy-set captain Tamar Lambert has not batted since the
opening game against Trinidad and Tobago when he managed scores of 14
and seven and could be somewhat rusty.
Barbados' bowling will once again be in the hands of fast bowlers
Callitos Lopez and Antonio Thomas as well as left-arm spinners
Sulieman Benn and Jedson Yarde, whose 17 wickets has cost a miserly
8.17 apiece.
'We are not worried by Jamaica,' Boxill said. 'We have the strength to
match them, the batters and bowlers, and the one thing we have got to
bring on is the fielders.'
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)