T Cozier: After football, West Indies meet South Africa (5 Jul 1998)
OUR sporting consciousness this past month has been saturated by footballs fascinating World Cup
05-Jul-1998
5 July 1998
After football, West Indies meet South Africa
Tony Cozier
OUR sporting consciousness this past month has been saturated by
footballs fascinating World Cup.
Our TV screens have been filled for hour after hour with fast-moving
images from France. The airwaves have overflowed with discussions on
every play and every player, even to the point where we have had our
intelligence insulted, by the cute, but clearly misplaced, idea of one
station of having schoolchildren providing match-previews.
Our newspapers have given us more words to digest on football than are
to be found in a James Mitchener novel.
As a result, that other game played with a round ball and 11 men a
side which, with due respects to the Reggae Boyz, holds somewhat more
significance for West Indians, has been ushered back stage. We simply
havent had the time or the inclination for cricket.
The occasional 30-second clip from CNN is all we have seen on our
screens and the news agency reports all we have read of South Africas
current Test series in England. Even Brian Laras tortured time with
Warwickshire has attracted little attention, far less the performances
of Nixon McLean and Franklyn Rose, the two fast bowlers in their first
seasons of county cricket.
Perhaps after next Sundays World Cup final in Paris, when the
Brazilians again celebrate another triumph, the names dominating our
media and most regularly heard on the call-in programmes will
gradually change.
Ronaldo, Berkamp, Klinsman and Kluivert will be transformed into
Donald, Pollock, Kirsten, Kallis and the other South African
cricketers who are currently so demolishing England and who, come
November, are the West Indies next opponents.
It is a series of five Tests and seven One-Day Internationals that
will be the first genuine test of the team under Laras captaincy.
While the double over England last season 3-1 in the Tests and 4-1 in
the One-Day matches turned the despair that followed the thrashing in
Pakistan only a few months earlier into new hope in Laras first series
at the helm, the current Tests in England have placed it in proper
perspective.
The plain and undeniable truth is that England remain weak and
woefully lacking self-confidence. It is just as obvious that South
Africa are strong, resilient and fiercely competitive.
Stunning defeat
It is now six years since the South Africans full and formal entry
into international cricket with their stunning defeat by the West
Indies at boycotted Kensington Oval. In that time, they have crammed
is as much as they could to gain the experience needed to count
themselves among the best in the world.
They can now do so without serious argument for only Australia have
got the better of them in the past three years. The latest Wisden Test
ratings places them equal second, with the West Indies; Rashid Latif,
who led Pakistans tour of South Africa earlier this year, proclaims
them as the best in the world in One-Day cricket.
Yet that 1992 Test is the only one they have had against the West
Indies so the forthcoming encounter is critical to both sides.
South Africas increasing success has been based on their all-round
ability, their exceptional fielding, their mental toughness and the
passionate need to prove themselves to the rest of the world. It also
helps, as West Indians well appreciate, that they should have a
genuinely fast, high quality fast bowler in Alan Donald, with a worthy
partner in the improving Shaun Pollock.
Like all the best teams, they do not depend simply on a few star
players and they do not buckle easily under pressure. There is no
Tendulkar, Lara, deSilva or Waugh in their order but they bat all the
way down. And there are batsmen who can bowl and bowlers who can bat.
Young Pollock, of that famous cricketing breed, is not only a class
act in support of Donald but a batsman at No. 7 good enough to prompt
coach Bob Woolmer, even if with some hyperbole, to describe him as one
of the finest all-rounders since Garry Sobers.
Lance Klusener is a quick outswing bowler whose batting place in the
Test side is No.9 but, as a hard-hitting left-hander, is a One-Day
century-maker going in at the top of the order. Jacques Kallis, who
hit a hundred at No.3 in the current lop-sided Test at Old Trafford,
chipped in to take four second innings wickets with his lively swing
bowling in the Lords victory. Hansie Cronje is not only the captain
and most reliable batsman but also a useful medium-pacer in the style
of Greg Chappell.
Added to all this is the variety provided by the unorthodox left-arm
spinner Paul Adams, still only 22 and, from reliable reports, getting
better by the match, and the ground fielding of the phenomenal Jonty
Rhodes and others which so stifles free-scoring that it not only saves
dozens of runs during a match but prompts indiscretions by impatient
batsmen.
Fortunately, West Indies coach Malcolm Marshall knows the South
Africans inside out for he played with Natal for several seasons and
is credited by several players themselves, most prominently Shaun
Pollock, with their development. No doubt, in between his duties as
Hampshire coach, he is closely following the series in England and
making notes. Once France 98 is through, he can do so without any
distractions.
He, above all others, will appreciate how tough the South African
assignment will be. If there was ever any doubt, the past couple of
months in England have restated the point.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)