West Indies face South Africa A (18 December 1998)
Lara ...Four-day match should be a good indicator of his form and mood
18-Dec-1998
18 December 1998
West Indies face South Africa A
By Tony Becca
Lara ...Four-day match should be a good indicator of his form and
mood.
CRICKET: Durban - The West Indian cricketers take on a strong South
African "A" team in a four-day encounter starting at Alexandra Park
in Pietermaritzburg tomorrow (early morning Jamaica time), and with
the all-important third Test following immediately, it should be a
good indicator of the form and the mood of Brian Lara's team.
Two down after losing the first two Tests in the five-match series,
the West Indies have to win the third if they hope to win the series.
At worse, they have to draw it if they are to save the series.
The second Test defeat was followed by a two-hour, soul-searching
team meeting, however, and since then, the players seem more focused
and more together, there is now a look of determination in their eyes
and, most importantly, they look like a happy bunch of cricketers
ready to defend their honour.
The new-look West Indians won their first match of the tour on
Wednesday when they crushed the Kwazulu-Natal Invitational XI with
nearly half the overs to spare and with eight wickets in hand.
According to Lara, it was a good performance - one which augurs well
for the third Test starting on Boxing Day.
For tomorrow's match, the West Indies will hope, not only to convince
all and sundry that all is well in their camp, but also to solve some
problems.
The opening pair is the first of those problems and despite
Wednesday's century stand between Clayton Lambert and Junior Murray,
Lambert and Philo Wallace have been suffering at the hands of Allan
Donald, Shaun Pollock and David Terbrugge and the team is hoping that
Lambert and his partner, Wallace or Stuart Williams, will bat long
and well against Klusener and company.
On Wednesday, Wallace said he was fine and had a short net session.
Yesterday, however, he did not practice. Instead he visited the
doctor as the uncertainty about what is his illness, how serious it
is, and how long his recovery will take continues.
The second problem is the number six spot and although teenager
Darren Ganga is tipped to get in after Floyd Reifer's disappointing
performance in the second Test, he has failed in his past three
innings and in order to convince Lara and company he is good enough,
he needs to play well here.
The third problem is the support for Ambrose and Walsh, and the West
Indians are hoping the performance of Franklyn Rose, Nixon McLean and
Mervyn Dillon on Wednesday was the start of a new day for them.
The West Indies cause in the third Test at Kingsmead may be better
served with right-arm legspinner Rawl Lewis around to support
Ambrose, Walsh and probably Rose. The tour selectors, however, do not
seem to believe so and, like Ganga, he too will need a good
performance over the next four days to convince them.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)