Pace battle expected in Port Elizabeth (30 January 1999)
Another unfortunate chapter was added to Brian Lara's ill-fated tour of South Africa yesterday-and to his team's hopes of a consolation triumph in the One-day International series
30-Jan-1999
30 January 1999
Pace battle expected in Port Elizabeth
Tony Cozier in Port Elizabeth
Injured Lara out
Another unfortunate chapter was added to Brian Lara's ill-fated tour
of South Africa yesterday-and to his team's hopes of a consolation
triumph in the One-day International series.
The West Indies captain was ruled out of today's fourth ODI after an
x-ray examination revealed that the blow he took while batting in the
third match in Durban on Wednesday night had chipped a bone in his
right forearm, just above the wrist.
"It's painful, especially with the impact of ball on bat when he makes
a stroke," manager Clive Lloyd said. "We'll just have to wait and see
how he comes on before we can say whether he'll be able to play in the
remaining matches."
The last three ODIs are in Cape Town on Tuesday, Blomfontein on
Friday, both day/night, and Centurion tomorrow week.
Lara was struck by a ball from the lively Jacques Kallis during South
Africa's hostile bodyline barrage that unsettled the West Indies
batsmen, prompted a top-order collapse and effectively secured victory
by 55 runs for a 2-1 series lead.
Just off the mark with a single at the time, he was not wearing an
arm-guard but fitted one after team physio Dennis Waight attended to
the injury in the middle. He batted on for another 40 balls before he
was caught by wicketkeeper Mark Boucher off his rival captain, Hansie
Cronje, for 32.
Lara's returns throughout the tour have been well below his overall
standards, as he averaged 31 in the Tests and was dismissed for a
first-ball 0, 3 and 32 in the three ODIs so far. But he remains the
batsman most feared by the opposition and still has the ability to
produce a match-winning innings.
His absence will be sorely felt especially since his replacement will
be either 20-year-old Daren Ganga, who would be making his debut at
this level, or Philo Wallace, who was dropped after the second match
following a sequence of scores in Tests and ODIs of 1, 8, 0, 4, 4, 3
and 0. Vice-captain Carl Hooper will lead in his place and there is no
other change to the XI.
It is the first match-Test or ODI-Lara has missed since he skipped the
last preliminary round encounter of the World Series tournament
against Pakistan in Australia two years ago when the West Indies had
already qualified for the final.
His forced withdrawal comes at a time when new intensity has been
added to the contest in the wake of Wednesday night's match.
The South Africans were privately irritated over Lara's successful
appeal for handled the ball against Daryl Cullinan, even though they
have publicly acknowledged it was justifiable, and the West Indies are
upset by what they saw as South Africa's excessive short-pitched
bowling.
Lloyd raised the issue with ICC match referee Javed Burki of Pakistan
yesterday and said Burki agreed with his concerns that it would spoil
the series if such tactics persisted. But Cronje and United Cricket
Board of South Africa (UCBSA) officials have scoffed at the comments.
"They came at us hard and we hit back as hard as we could," Cronje
said, acknowledging that he had ordered Kallis, Steve Elworthy and
Lance Klusener to dig the ball in short on a pitch freshened by the
dew under the floodlights.
"We reckoned if we could get a couple of quick wickets we would be
right back in the game," he said. "As for being intimatory, that's
nonsense. The umpires are there to no-ball any delivery they deem
illegitimate."
He claimed his players weren't upset by the manner of Cullinan's
dismissal, adding: "That's all part of the game, but so too are fast
rising deliveries if you can get them to the right height."
UCBSA director of umpiring Brian Basson said his office had received
calls from some irate West Indian supporters protesting the South
African bowling.
"I had one guy who was furious, saying it was unfair and
intimidatory," Basson said. "All I said to him was that he should cast
his mind back to when Clive Lloyd was captain of the West Indies. I
just told him to remember who invented short-pitched bowling."
The pitch for the Second Test, on which the West Indies were bowled
out for 121 and 141 and beaten by 178 runs in three days, was a fast
bowler's delight. If it's similar for today's match it would add to
fuel to the fire but it is expected to be far easier for batting
following two weeks of hot, sunny weather.
Teams:
West Indies: Carl Hooper (Capt), Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Philo
Wallace or Daren Ganga, Junior Murray, Keith Arthurton, Keith Semple,
Ridley Jacobs, Nixon McLean, Neil McGarrell, Curtly Ambrose, Reon
King.
South Africa (likely): Hansie Cronje (Capt), Daryl Cullinan,
Herschelle Gibbs, Lance Klusener, Jacques Kallis, Jonty Rhodes, Dale
Benkenstein, Shaun Pollock, Mark Boucher, Pat Symcox and Steve
Elworthy.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)