Plea to Lara (12 May 1999)
Manager Clive Lloyd was last night trying to persuade Brian Lara to play today in the West Indies' final preparation match for the World Cup, against county team Surrey at the Oval
12-May-1999
12 May 1999
Plea to Lara
Tony Cozier
Manager Clive Lloyd was last night trying to persuade Brian Lara
to play today in the West Indies' final preparation match for
the World Cup, against county team Surrey at the Oval.
Lloyd was hoping the strongest team would take the field and
said key fast bowlers Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh would be
in the eleven. Like Lara, neither of the veterans appeared in
the earlier matches against Gloucestershire at Bristol last
Sunday (abandoned after 16 overs) nor against Warwickshire at
Edgbaston on Monday, which the West Indies won.
If Lara decides to play, it would be the captain's first game
since the fourth One-Day International in the preceding series
against Australia on April 18.
After that, he withdrew to protect a sore right wrist that had
not properly healed since South African Jacques Kallis inflicted
a hairline fracture in an International at Durban on January 18.
'Up to him'
"You can understand that Brian doesn't want to take any chances
at all that he might get hit on the wrist again in these warm-up
games," Lloyd said last night. "It's obvious he's building
himself up to do well in the tournament and is very keen to be
at his fittest and his best for the real thing.
"But I feel he needs to have an innings in a match situation and
this is the last chance," he added. "It's up to Brian to make up
his mind in the morning."
Lara had two lengthy net sessions, the first on Monday at the
Edgbaston ground that was his home during two seasons with
Warwickshire, and again at the Oval yesterday.
"The wrist is getting better all the time and it'll be ready
come the first match on Sunday," he said. "The World Cup only
comes around once every four years; it's the biggest thing in
cricket and I'm looking forward to the West Indies doing well."
That opening match is against Pakistan who have the most
talented and best balanced, if not the most temperamentally
sound, team of the 12.
Strong attack
Their bowling, with the experienced and fast left-arm swing of
captain Wasim Akram, the speed of Waqar Younis, the seam of
Azhar Mahmood, the combined spin of Saqlain Mushtaq, Shahid
Afridi and Mushtaq Ahmed, and the new "fastest man in the
world", Shoaib Akhtar, is as strong and as varied as there is at
the moment.
A couple of net sessions as groundwork for that challenge cannot
equate to a good innings against reasonable county bowling in
the kind of conditions Lara is likely to confront for the next
six weeks.
England in May is far different to the weather and the pitches
Lara encountered in South Africa and the West Indies on his most
recent assignments.
Stuart Williams strained a leg muscle in training yesterday and
Lloyd said he was an unlikely starter for today's match.
If Lara decides to stand down again, Jimmy Adams will again
captain the team and bat at No.3. He will be preceded by Sherwin
Campbell and Ridley Jacobs and followed by Shivnarine
Chanderpaul, Ricardo Powell, Keith Arthurton, Phil Simmons and
four bowlers.
In his first match for the West Indies, Lloyd said the
20-year-old Powell, Carl Hooper's last-minute replacement,
"struck the ball well" in his 32 against Warwickshire on Monday.
When Lara returns and Williams is fit, he will be on duty as
12th man but those who were at Edgbaston report that he showed
that he would not be out of his depth in any final XI.
It is a comforting thought.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)