October 8, 1997
Red Stripe: Jamaica search for edge
Tony Becca, Senior Sport Editor
CRICKET: The final matches in the round-robin section of Zone A
of the Red Stripe Bowl limited over cricket tournament take
place today with Jamaica up against Bermuda at Alpart and
Trinidad and Tobago tackling the Windward Islands at Melbourne
Oval.
Both matches in the 50-over per side contest get underway at
9:30.
The Trinidad and Tobago/Windward Islands match was scheduled for
Folly Oval in Port Antonio but has been switched to Melbourne
Oval because of the heavy rains which made it impossible to
prepare the pitch at Folly.
After two rounds, Jamaica and the Windward Islands, who picked
up one point each from their rain-ruined opening-round match,
share the lead on three points, followed by Trinidad and Tobago
on two and Bermuda on zero.
With the top team in the zone meeting the fourth-placed team and
number two going against number three on Saturday in the
sudden-death quarter-finals, with number one tipped to get the
better of number four, the interest in today's matches is the
jostle for positions.
Based on performances to date, that should be quite interesting,
for although Jamaica are expected to be too good for Bermuda,
such has been the performance of the Jamaica batsmen that
Bermuda must fancy their chances of an upset; and although joint
leaders Windward Islands are ahead of them in the standings,
although they lost to Jamaica who were in trouble at 72 for five
chasing the Windwards Islands' 215 for nine, Trinidad and Tobago
have the ammunition to defeat the Windward Islands in what
should be the feature match.
Looking at the Jamaica/ Bermuda match, it should be easy going
for Jamaica - especially as top batsman James Adams, who missed
the earlier matches due to an ankle injury, is expected to be in
the line-up for today's game.
With or without Adams however, Jamaica's batsmen should come
into their own. If they don't, if the likes of Robert Samuels,
Leon Garrick, Wavell Hinds, Tony Powell and Delroy Morgan fail
against the limited Bermuda attack on a pitch which, as usual,
is expected to be good for batting, it would be more than
disappointing - it would be embarrassing.
Once Jamaica's batsmen perform, even reasonably, Bermuda should
lose and remain at the bottom of the standings - for the simple
reason that the home team's attack of Courtney Walsh, Franklyn
Rose, Patrick Patterson, Laurie Williams and Nehemiah Perry
should be too good for Clay Smith and company.
If Jamaica, as they should, defeat Bermuda, the result, as far
as the quarter-final round is concerned, would not matter to
Trinidad and Tobago who, win or lose, would be sentenced to play
either Jamaica or the Windward Islands.
While victory for Jamaica and victory for Trinidad and Tobago
would line up Jamaica versus Bermuda, Trinidad and Tobago versus
the Windward Islands in the quarter-finals, victory for the
Windward Islands would leave them tied with Jamaica at the top
of the zone with run rate deciding who gets the better draw in
the quarter-finals - who go against bottom placed Bermuda and
who go against Trinidad and Tobago.
Looking at both teams, Trinidad and Tobago, with batsmen like
Brian Lara, Suruj Ragoonath, Phil Simmons, Richard Smith, Andre
Lawrence and Lincoln Roberts, and an attack to come from pacers
Ian Bishop, Mervyn Dillon and Nigel Francis, and spinners
Rajendra Dhanraj, Kenneth Hazel and Dinanath Ramnarine, are
favoured to get the better of the Windward Islands
Source: The Jamaica Gleaner