If at the start of the season you told the members of the Piton Dover
they would make the Fire Shield cricket final they would have replied:
Sure!
If you told them their opponents would be MTW, they probably would
have replied: MT-Who?
Well, that's the case today at the Police Sports Club, Weymouth, in
the grand final of the Barbados Fire & Commercial Shield Cricket final
the marquee tournament for lower division sides in the Barbados
Cricket Association's (BCA) competitions.
Dover, with their many former Division 1 stalwarts, start as
favourites, but don't tell MTW that. At stake is a bounty of $5 000,
while the losers will pocket $3 500 not bad for a day's work.
The team that plays better on the day will win. We have been
practising very hard both batting and fielding and we have been
getting some physiological advice to be better prepared for the game,
said MTW skipper and leading batsman Geoffrey Padmore.
This is MTW's first Shield final after 11 years in the BCA competition
and allrounder Padmore is the reason why they are there.
He blasted an aggressive 73 against Central in the semifinal after his
team was struggling on 70 for six. He promises a well-balanced team in
what should be a very competitive game.
Dover warmed up yesterday in style taking the last four Fustic wickets
in 15 minutes in their Premier League match to record an innings
victory and the afternoon off.
Dover, the 1992 champions, are confident of victory according to their
captain Vibert Greene, the former Barbados and West Indies B
allrounder.
We are confident of victory, he said. We met last year and we won
quite easily, but MTW, with some new faces, will be on a high and it
will not be an easy task. I think we have the best team in the lower
division, but cricket is still played on the day.
The Dovermen showed their mettle in the semifinal with a four-wicket
victory over the Combermere School team. It was the depth of
experience which pulled them through.
Man for man, Dover have a big advantage.
The batting is centred around Peter Clarke, Silverton Weekes, Bernard
Kinch, Wilbur Bruce and Stephen Blackett. Allrounders Greene, Jerry
Kirton and Richard Thornton were all household names of the past.
The bowling department is based on mainly fast-medium. The Kirton
brothers, Jerry and Levere, along with Greene and Thornton, will be
supported by Litchfield Kirton, who completes a trio of brothers in
the team.
MTW have Padmore and other batsmen include veteran Glendon Johnson,
Anthony Burrowes, Testa Baker and Philbert Brathwaite. Wicketkeeper
Peter Blackman completes a reasonable batting line-up.
Fast bowlers Peter Francis and Charles Ramsay will share the new ball,
with support coming from Winston Gittens, Mark Bailey and left-arm
spinner Denis Payne can also do the job.
It promises to be a big job, but as we have seen in the past Oh how
the mighty have fallen.