Simmons back in West Indies Squad (2 March 1999)
The West Indies selectors last night came up with their most ingenious strategy in years, naming a team of 15 for the first Test against Australia
02-Mar-1999
2 March 1999
Simmons back in West Indies Squad
Tony Cozier
The West Indies selectors last night came up with their most ingenious
strategy in years, naming a team of 15 for the first Test against
Australia.
The only drawback is that only 11 can actually take the field at the
Queen's Park Oval on Friday morning.
In the present circumstances of injuries, absenteeism and downright
defeatism that have followed the degrading drubbing of South Africa,
only captain-on-probation Brian Lara and wicket-keeper Ridley Jacobs,
the one success in South Africa, could be considered certainties prior
to last night's announcement in a media conference at the Trinidad
Hilton.
The options for the panel of chairman Mike Findlay, Joey Carew, Joel
Garner and Lara were severely limited. They have stuck as much as they
could to their all-embracing policy statement, issued two weeks ago -
and to the long established theory of when in doubt, go back to Phil
Simmons.
True to established form, they have chosen yet another new opening
batsman, the 12th specifically chosen for the position since the
break-up of the great Gordon Greenidge-Desmond Haynes partnership in
1992.
He is Suruj Ragoonath, the dashing 30-year-old Trinidadian who joins,
in chronological order, Simmons, Stuart Williams, Sherwin Campbell,
Richie Richardson, Carl Hooper, Robert Samuels, Adrian Griffith,
Clayton Lambert, Philo Wallace, Junior Murray and Daren Ganga as those
specifically used in the position.
No spinners
He will join Sherwin Campbell, the solid little Barbadian who has
earned his reinstatement following his omission from the tour of South
Africa following a consistent Busta Cup tournament in which he has
averaged in the high 60s.
Also true to form, they have included not a single spin bowler in the
15 as against six fast bowlers.
They had stated that emphasis would be placed on "exposing young
talented, committed and disciplined cricketers who appear to have the
potential to serve the long-term interest of West Indies cricket".
Those initially identified appear in the 15. They are the two
Barbadian fast bowlers, Pedro Collins, the 22-year-old left-armer who
has been consistent on two "A" team tours, and Corey Collymore, 22,
who has impressed in his debut first-class season, and the Trinidad
and Tobago batsman Lincoln Roberts, 24, who is finally fulfilling his
obvious early promise.
All are yet to play Test cricket and are unlikely to do so just
yet. The veteran champion fast bowlers, Ambrose and Walsh, have been
declared fit and their support will come from Merv Dillon and Reon
King, both of whom have had five-wicket returns in their last two
matches.
There is no place for Nixon McLean, the fastest of the contenders, who
bowled disappointingly in his four Tests in South Africa and was
expensive for the President's XI against the Australians in the match
that ended yesterday.
Collins and Collymore are along for the experience or in case one of
the older hands tweaks a delicate muscle or develops acute fatigue
syndrome on the morning of the match.
Selection policy
The other category covered in the earlier selection policy statement
was those "who demonstrate the capacity to cope immediately with the
demands of the highest standards of international cricket at both the
Test and One-Day levels".
There are precious few who qualify at present and two, Carl Hooper and
Shivnarine Chanderpaul, were eliminated from selection.
Hooper is by the side of his seriously ill baby son on the other side
of the planet, in Adelaide, Australia, and the date of his return is
uncertain. Chanderpaul, who is tending to the torn ligaments in his
right shoulder that added injury to insult in South African, is
expected to be fit to be back for the second Test in Kingston,
starting March 13.
There was no alternative but to recall replacements with some
experience of the pressure-cooker atmosphere of Test cricket, even if
it is difficult to find those who fit the part of the criterion
dealing with "the capacity to cope immediately with the demands of the
highest standards of international cricket".
They have logically gone for Roland Holder who enjoys a productive
relationship with the Queen's Park Oval where he has scored four of
his 15 first-class hundreds as well as his highest score in ten Tests,
91 against India two years ago.
Less logically, if no less predictably, they have given Simmons the
19th recall of his chequered career.
Unimpressive record
Simmons' records at Test and first-class level, past and present, are
unimpressive (an average of 22.26 in 26 Tests), his last three Tests
scores were 0, 1 and 1 and he has not had an outstanding Busta Cup,
averaging 29.57 batting in the middle-order.
He clearly owes the abiding faith the selectors have perennially had
in him on his uplifting influence in the dressing room.
Dave Joseph, 29, the belligerent Leeward Islands batsman from Antigua,
makes his Test debut in his tenth season of regional cricket and is
unlikely to be overawed by the situation.
He topscored with 64 in the President's X1 first innings on Saturday
against the same bowling he will meet in the Test but the atmosphere
at the Queen's Park Oval on Friday will be altogether more tense.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)