Trinidad and Tobago: Trial time for 'Classic' teams (7 January 1999)
Time, perhaps, has never been so precious a commodity for a bunch of cricketers as it will be over the next four days for the teams of Ian Bishop and David Williams, starting today
07-Jan-1999
7 January 1999
Trinidad and Tobago: Trial time for 'Classic' teams
By Garth Wattley
Time, perhaps, has never been so precious a commodity for a bunch of
cricketers as it will be over the next four days for the teams of Ian
Bishop and David Williams, starting today.
What, in normal circumstances would be merely the unofficial
curtain-raiser of the 1999 local cricket season, a dress rehearsal for
the regional combat ahead in the new Busta Cup competition, has become
much more.
In short the Queen's Park Oval will, this morning, not only be playing
host to a territorial rivalry-North versus South in the annual
ICN-sponsored Gerry Gomez Classic. It will also be a trial ground, a
proving pitch for 22 cricketers vying for places in the national squad
for the opening Busta Cup game against Guyana at Guaracara Park next
weekend. That match, like the new millennium, is a sure thing.
But a millennium bug of a problem-no match practice-has made adequate
preparation for the unmovable date a real difficulty. Some three trial
matches had to be cancelled either because of the unavailability of
venues or the unsuitability of grounds because of the wet weather.
Last weekend just half of the scheduled two-day Busta Cup trial was
possible. And while spinners Avidesh Samaroo and Mukesh Persad made
the most of their time, bagging four wickets apiece, no batsman on the
Ian Bishop XI was able to seize the time.
Needless to say then, the weekend will also be an anxious period for
the national selectors.
"Hopefully we can get four days of cricket," was chairman Rangy
Nanan's first, optimistic hope.
But of equally great concern to Nanan will be the form of the men
wielding the willow.
"I would prefer to see the batsmen scoring runs," Nanan poignantly
told the Express yesterday.
"The bowlers are experienced enough," he added, "and they will feel
more relaxed against Guyana if the batsmen get a big total. In South
Africa, our bowlers are doing a fairly good jobs"
It was also not lost on the former regional wicket-taking record
holder that the more desperate Caribbean need is for quality batsmen.
Stability in the middle was also the preoccupation of another
selector, national coach Bryan Davis, "I would like to see occupation
of the crease by the batsmen," Davis stressed.
"Not having had match practice, it does not mean that they cannot get
themselves in and bat properly."
Recent history should provide the decision-makers with some hope. In
each of the last three Classics, there has been at least one ton. In
1996, South opener Suruj Ragoonath became the first batsman to score
centuries in each innings of a game.
Then in the rain-ruined 1997 match, Richard Smith, leading the North,
hit an accomplished 119.
Last year, it was West Indies captain Brian Lara who stole the show
with a patient double century-216 not out-made largely in partnership
with Lincoln Roberts who himself got 112. The pair set up an innings
victory that allowed the "Town Boys" to regain the trophy.
Lara will not be a part of the line-up this time. But Roberts, whose
promising start ended with an abysmal run in the regional matches,
will have a chance once more to build a solid platform for the season.
A good showing from the Tobagonian will be vital especially given the
limited opportunity available to fringe players like Imran Jan and
Zaheer Ali.
But with the absence of both Mervyn Dillon and Dinanath Ramnarine,
there is also opportunity with-application-for bowlers like
leg-spinners Vishal Persad-Maharaj and quickies Theodore Modeste and
Asif Jan to stake their claims.
At this eleventh hour, wicket-taking, run-making headaches are the
kind Nanan, Davis and company would gladly welcome.
Teams
North: Ian Bishop (Captain), Richard Smith, Leon Romero, Andre
Lawrence, Imran Jan, Lincoln Roberts, Mark Ramkissoon, Asif Jan,
Ricardo Paty, Ken Hazel, Peter Ramon-Fortune, Zaheer Ali, Vishal
Persad-Maharaj.
South: David Williams (Captain), Suruj Ragoonath, Anil
Balliram, Dennis Rampersad, Shazam Babwah, Jerry Jumadeen, Marlon
Black, Andy Jackson, Kishore Lalchan, Navin Chan, Avidesh Samaroo,
Muskesh Persad, Theodore Modeste.
Source :: The Trinidad Express (https://www.trinidad.net/express/)