Testing time for West Indies trio (4 December 1998)
EAST LONDON - The touring West Indies cricketers take on Border in a three-day match at Buffalo Park today and for four players, one South African and three West Indians, it will be a trial match
04-Dec-1998
4 December 1998
Testing time for West Indies trio
By Tony Becca
EAST LONDON - The touring West Indies cricketers take on Border in a
three-day match at Buffalo Park today and for four players, one South
African and three West Indians, it will be a trial match.
After drawing with Griqualand West and losing to Free State, to South
Africa, and then to an Eastern Province XI in a one-day contest, this
game is important to the tourists who need to win a match as they
prepare for the second Test starting in Port Elizabeth on December
10.
The talk around East London, however, is not about who will win the
match, but more about the performance of Makhaya Ntini - the
21-year-old black pacer who missed the first Test in Johannesburg.
The first player from the United Cricket Board of South Africa's
development programme to represent South Africa, Ntini was not
selected for the first Test and the black community is up in arms and
demanding his selection for the Port Elizabeth Test.
For Ntini, who has appeared in four Test matches and has taken 10
wickets, to get in, however, he has to bowl well over the next three
days. In fact, with Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock automatic
selections for the Test match and David Terbrugge enjoying a good
debut performance, even though there is a move to select a non-white
regardless, Ntini will have to do more than bowl well - he will have
to bowl very well.
Ntini is not the only player on trial. With Stuart Williams failing
to perform in the first Test, he also is on trial and so too are
Floyd Reifer and Darren Ganga.
Up to press time, the West Indies had not yet named their team for
the match, but it is almost certain that all three will be in action
as the selectors appear set to give them a chance to decide their own
destinies.
Williams, who scored 12 against Guateng XI in Soweto in the one-day
match which opened the tour, 11 against Griqualand West, 25 and 52
against Free State, 35 and 12 in the Test, and 20 on Wednesday, could
lose his place. That, however, could depend on the performance of
either Ganga, who scored 18 in Soweto, 50 against Griqualand West,
and one on Wednesday, or Reifer, who scored 93 on Wednesday in his
only appearance so far on the tour.
The blacks of East London are cheering for Ntini and because of his
record, the Caribbean fans here are rooting not for Williams, but for
either Ganga or Reifer.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)