North Zone could clinch Duleep Trophy with win over Central
The Duleep Trophy tournament enters a crucial phase on Thursday
Partab Ramchand
24-Jan-2001
The Duleep Trophy tournament enters a crucial phase on Thursday. The
outcome of the two matches to be played - South Zone vs East Zone at
Agartala and North Zone vs Central Zone at Delhi - could have a vital
bearing on which team will emerge champions.
Of course, North Zone could make the final round of matches,
commencing on February 1, absolutely inconsequential with a victory
over Central. They are comfortably perched on top of the points table
with 18 points from three matches. A win over Central would give them
eight points, pushing their final tally to 26. It would be a mark
which the other four teams in the fray cannot hope to reach. West
Zone, who are not playing this round, have nine points from three
matches and cannot possibly hope to catch up with North Zone. The same
goes for the other teams South, Central and East, all of whom have
currently played two matches. While South and Central have eight
points, East Zone have but five. Competitive interest in the final
round would however remain if North Zone get only five points or three
points from the New Delhi game. In this scenario, South Zone will
remain in contention for the title should they defeat East Zone.
A draw with a first innings lead will take North Zone to 23 points. A
tally of three points would push their aggregate to 21. If South Zone
manages to defeat both East and Central - which it meets in its last
match - they have a theoretical chance to surpass North. In this
scenario, South Zone will finish with 24 points.
North's confidence level must be on a high, particularly after their
last game in which they routed East Zone by 237 runs inside three
days. They will also have the home advantage. Other factors in their
favour include the form of their batsmen. Skipper Vikram Rathour,
Virender Shewag, Dinesh Mongia, Akash Chopra, Vijay Dahiya and Yuvraj
Singh have all been among the runs. But in a batsman oriented
tournament, perhaps the performance of the competition has come from
their medium pacer Aashish Nehra. The former Indian seamer finished
with match figures of ten for 90 against East Zone, including a deadly
spell of seven for 14 in the first innings.
North Zone however may not have things their own way. For Central Zone
too have batsmen in form. Jai P Yadav, skipper Amay Khurasiya and Md
Kaif have all registered tall scores. But the bowling has been harshly
treated.
South Zone should start favourites at Agartala. East Zone started well
in gaining first innings points against Central thanks in the main to
Rohan Gavaskar's timely 146. But they fared badly against North Zone
and cannot be in a very confident frame of mind. South Zone on the
other hand have fared better. They conceded the first innings lead to
North Zone but came back strongly by taking first innings points
against West Zone. The match was highlighted by a fourth wicket record
stand of 409 runs between skipper Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. While
Dravid got 188, Laxman scored 217, his tenth century in ten domestic
first class games. Only in the previous match against North Zone he
scored 179. He really is a batsman to be feared. South Zone also have
the better bowling attack and this could prove decisive.