Zimbabwe in trouble
While the West Indies were enjoying a day off taking in Africa's bountiful wildlife on a tour of a game park outside Harare, India did them a favour at the Queen's Club yesterday
Tony Cozier
28-Jun-2001
While the West Indies were enjoying a day off taking in Africa's
bountiful wildlife on a tour of a game park outside Harare, India did
them a favour at the Queen's Club yesterday.
Their hard-fought victory over Zimbabwe, with four wickets and only
four balls to spare, ensured their place in the final of the
triangular Coca-Cola Cup series and all but guaranteed that the West
Indies would be their opponents come July 7.
Zimbabwe's third successive defeat left their hopes of still
qualifying resting on an unlikely sequence of events and further
compounded the problems they have faced over the past week, on and off
the field.
The West Indies would have to lose their two remaining matches against
India on Saturday and Wednesday and the other against Zimbabwe here on
Sunday to be level on two points with the home team.
The finalists would then be determined on run-rate, and Zimbabwe would
need a massive victory on Sunday to erase what is now a considerable
deficit.
Zimbabwean cricket is going through difficult times at present.
The euphoria of an admirable victory over India in the second Test
nine days ago to square the series has quickly evaporated through a
protest by senior players against the Zimbabwe Cricket Union's (ZCU)
selection policy and injuries that have sidelined Andy Flower and
Heath Streak, their two finest players.
Streak stepped down as captain prior to the opening match against the
West Indies last Saturday because he was upset that his opinions were
not being respected by a selection panel of six that did not include
either him or the coach, the former Australian fast bowler, Carl
Rackemann.
An accommodation was reached after an animated meeting between the
parties that added captain and coach to the panel, increasing it to an
unwieldy eight.
There have also been squabbles over pay levels, notably in England
last year, that led to the emigration of two key players, Murray
Goodwin and Neil Johnson, to English county cricket. These have not
yet been adequately solved, as the Zimbabwean dollar continues its
plunge in value and the game becomes more expensive to run.
As in South Africa, the debate over the pace of selection purely on
merit against that based on the encouragement of the emerging black
cricketers the so-called affirmative action has also tended to divide
players and administrators.
Peter Chingkoka, the respected and very able black Zimbabwean who
heads the ZCU, has to lead with all the tact of a Kofi Annan to keep
matters on an even keel. The recent defeats would not have helped.
With a pool of no more than 300 players to chose from, Zimbabwe have
done well to hold their own at Test and One-Day International level.
But the game was previously restricted to the minority white and Asian
populations and these are now dwindling through emigration in the wake
of political, social and economic turmoil.
Development programmes aimed at carrying the game to the majority
black population have been in place for some time and more black
players have made their way into the Zimbabwe team than into South
Africa's since 1992 when they both gained Test status, South Africa
for the second time.
Several have come through the well-appointed academy and have
benefited from the excellent facilties in the main centres. Five of
the Zimbabwe A team in the practice match against the West Indies on
Tuesday were black.
Henry Olonga, the personable, articulate and successful fast bowler,
was Zimbabwe's first real black star cricketer. But he has drifted out
of the limelight through injury. In Tatenda Taibu, the tiny, livewire,
18-year-old wicket-keeper, they have an obvious personality who should
be a role model and inspiration for the hundreds of those young
schoolchildren now being introduced to the game.
But what Zimbabwe cricket needs most of all right now is more
consistent success on the field and patience, unity and understanding
off it. The two are intertwined.