Stirring encounter expected between Guyana, Barbados (16 October 1998)
The final four weekend of the 1998 Red Stripe Bowl limited-overs cricket tournament gets underway at Kaiser, Discovery Bay, today with Zone One winners and five-time champions Guyana up against Zone Two runners-up and three-time winners Barbados in
16-Oct-1998
16 October 1998
Stirring encounter expected between Guyana, Barbados
Tony Becca
The final four weekend of the 1998 Red Stripe Bowl limited-overs
cricket tournament gets underway at Kaiser, Discovery Bay, today with
Zone One winners and five-time champions Guyana up against Zone Two
runners-up and three-time winners Barbados in the first of the
semi-finals.
The action in the 50-over-a-side contest, the 201st regional one-day
match, starts at 9:30, and everything points to a stirring battle for
a place in the Heroes Day showdown for the title on Monday.
Last year, Guyana made it to the semi-finals and Barbados did not.
One reason why Barbados did not make it was because Guyana clobbered
them by 66 runs at Bourda in the preliminary round and that is a
reason why today's semi-final promises so much.
In bidding for a place in the final for the first time since 1995
when they lost to the Leeward Islands, Barbados are out for a
revenge.
Guyana shared the title with Trinidad and Tobago in the rain-ruined
first final of 1996, lost to Trinidad and Tobago in the second and
lost to the Leeward Islands last year. They are determined to get a
fourth successive shot at the honours and the US$10,000 first prize
and whenever vengeance and determination come face to face it is
usually a battle royal.
Another reason for the promise of a thrilling encounter is the
players on parade.
For Guyana, the line-up includes West Indies batsmen Carl Hooper,
Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Clayton Lambert, plus Keith Semple, Andrew
Gonsalves and youngsters Ramnaresh Sarwan and Nicholas deGroot,
pacers Reon King and Kevin Darlington, left-arm legspinner Neil
McGarrell and right-arm legspinner Mahendra Nagamootoo.
For Barbados, the line-up includes five Test batsmen in Philo
Wallace, Sherwin Campbell, Adrian Griffith, Roland Holder and Floyd
Reifer; medium-pacers Henderson Broomes and Henderson Bryan, left-arm
spinners Winston Reid and young Ryan Hinds.
With fast bowler Patterson Thompson almost certain to be excluded,
the players in doubt are wicketkeeper Courtney Browne, who, because
of the presence of McGarrell and Nagamootoo in the Guyana line-up
could loose his place to Ricky Hoyte who is a better player to spin,
and left are pacer Pedro Collins who, in an effort to strengthen the
batting, could be eased aside for young batsman Ontonio Mayers who
also bowls a tight medium pace.
Looking at both teams, with Hooper, Chanderpaul and Lambert to lead
their batting, and despite what coach Clyde Butts has described as
their disappointing fielding to date, King and McGarrell to spearhead
their bowling, Guyana should start favourites against a Barbados team
which lacks a batsman the quality of either Hooper or Chanderpaul, a
pacer with the skill of King and, despite Reid's vast experience, a
spin bowler with the talent of McGarrell.
The beauty of one-day cricket, however, is that except when a team is
completely out of its depth, the pendulum swings from side to side
and sometimes its final swing favours the less fancied - a tag which,
unlike their glory days when they paraded such champions as Gary
Sobers, Conrad Hunte, Cammie Smith and Seymour Nurse, Wes Hall and
Charlie Griffith, Barbados will have to live with today.
Although their middle order has not been performing and although they
do not parade a Hooper or a Chanderpaul, Barbados possess a pair of
openers in Wallace and Campbell - one riding on Cloud Nine, the other
with a point to prove - two batsmen who could set the pace for those
to come.
To the Jamaican fans whose team fell by the wayside and left four
visiting teams to preen themselves on their stage, it matters not who
wins. What matters is that they get a treat to remember and some
strokeplay to cherish.
A close and exciting finish would provide the treat and the elegant
Hooper could produce the strokeplay on a Kaiser pitch which, usually,
is good for batting.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)