Date-stamped : 14 Apr95 - 10:40
West Indies v Australia, Test 2
Recreation Ground, St John's, Antigua, 8,9,10,12,13 April 1995

====> Prematch, 7 Apr 95
Beckett offers West Indies hope - Mike Selvey

ANTIGUA Test matches, coming at the end of  a  series   as   they
have done in the past, have been joyous occasions for West Indies
supporters. The series won, the  Recreation  Ground  has been   a
place for West Indies to strut their stuff.

Chickies Disco thunders out in the  Double   Decca   Stand,   the
rhythm of the Metal Band competes at the other end of the ground,
and the resident transvestites Gravy and Mayfield cavort. It  can
be  great  stuff: sometimes world records get broken.  Australia,
four years ago, are the only side to have won here.

Today the atmosphere might be different.   This   is   only   the
second  Test of a four -match series and West Indies are not just
a match down to Australia, but after a 10-wicket defeat in Barba-
dos  inside  three days, are in danger of losing credibility. The
calypso singer Beckett`s "Rally Round the West Indies" - a Chick-
ie favourite - will be put to the test.

Australia outplayed West Indies in  Bridgetown  in   all   funda-
mental  departments  of the game. Their inexperienced seam attack
bowled to a proper length and on one side  of  the wicket   only;
Caribbean  impatience and a hint of bounce and movement, particu-
larly from Glenn McGrath in the second innings, did the rest.

With the exception of Mark Taylor and the wonderful period on the
first   day  when Lara and Hooper counterattacked, no batting was
totally secure. But once more, Australia`s  team ethic  took them
through:  eight  partnerships  in  excess  of 27.  Finally, their
fielding was just too competitive.

All of which would seem to make the second Test certain to go the
same  way. That is a dangerous presumption. West Indies have been
slow out of the box before.

In Bridgetown, in the second innings, the  tail  folded   in   an
orgy  of  mindless  slogging. It was as if they had given up, and
when Australia began the chase for the 39 they  needed, and   the
chance  was there to offer a reminder of what awaits in the lock-
er, Curtly Ambrose, probably the game`s  most  potent  destroyer,
stood idle at mid-off. It spoke volumes.

But they have a strong new manager in  Andy  Roberts,   and   his
post-match  thoughts,  rather like his bowling, were short and to
the point. "You were shit," he harangued his squad. "You have two
days  to fix it." The same players, with the exception of the un-
fortunate Barbadian Sherwin Campbell, will be attempting  to   do
so.

Fundamental to the improvement must be  a  more  responsible  ap-
proach  to batting, beginning with the openers, where the captain
Richie Richardson will fill the breach  left  by Desmond   Haynes
(who,  incidentally,  has confirmed he will be suing the West In-
dies Cricket  Board, citing restraint of trade),  but   including
the  lower-order  batsmen - all capable of half centuries at this
level.

The draw aside, Australia remain  favourites,   but   are   still
vulnerable.  West  Indies  have  come  back  before: as Beckett`s
calypso insists: "You know we are going to rise again like a rag-
ing fire.  Under sunshine we`re going to take this thing higher."
They are more than capable this time.

Source :: The Guardian
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 1, 8 Apr 95
The All Saints Iron band clanged and crashed with abandon, but it
was  the West Indian Cannonball Express which rocked Australia in
the second test here yesterday. Led by Mr Indestructible,  Court-
ney Walsh, great survivor and ultimate professional, the West In-
dies pacemen executed a merciless 216-run garotting of  Australia
after   openers  Michael  Slater and Mark Taylor put on 82 in the
opening session at St Johns` Recreation Ground.

The West Indies resume at 0-14 this morning, Stuart Williams hav-
ing enjoyed a priceless reprieve at two when Greg Blewett mislaid
a juggling pad-bat catch at point from Paul Reiffel, half an hour
before stumps.

Having lost the toss for the second time in the series, Australia
began  fabulously  through  Taylor and Slater, only for Taylor to
mis-hook a short-pitched delivery from Curtly Ambrose and sky the
catch  to  Walsh  -  a serious misjudgement and a sadly misguided
stroke just two deliveries from lunch.

The broiling heat burned down and  the  pulsating  drums  of  the
steel and iron bands, periodically drowned out by Chickie`s Hi-Fi
in the West Indies Oil Company Stand, provided a stifling   atmo-
sphere  which  added  to  the pressure enveloping Australia after
lunch.

Having cautioned his headstrong partner after  a  13-run  opening
over assault on Carl Hooper - Slater drove the off-spinner out of
the ground at long-on, then carted him away through mid-wicket  -
Taylor himself was the opener to succumb, skying Ambrose to Walsh
parked inside the fine leg fence.

Taylor rambled back, chastising himself all the way back  to  the
pavilion,  but  not  as much as he surely did through the ensuing
hour as Slater, Mark Waugh, David Boon, and Steve Waugh came  and
went in disturbingly rapid fashion.

In 13 fateful overs Australia slumped from 0-82 to 5-126,  losing
their top five batsmen for just 44 runs.

It was stifling  more  than  penetrating  pace  bowling,  a  slow
strangulation  of runs, the West Indies reducing the over-rate in
an all-too-familiar manner to  a  painstaking  40 overs  in   192
minutes  after  lunch,  or almost five minutes an over. But there
was some crude batting, too, by the Australians.

Bowling into the cross-breeze before the capacity crowd, with the
blue-capped  inmates  of the adjoining St Johns penitentiary pro-
viding an enthusiastic Scotsmen`s Hill over the wall, Walsh  gave
a superbly varied and accurate display for 21.3 overs.

Year in, year out, Walsh, 32, is freakish the way he  manages  to
bowl  for Jamaica, captain his county Gloucestershire and do yeo-
man service for the West Indies without breaking down  or  simply
going  mad.  In  his 72nd Test, Walsh reached 263 wickets. He has
already passed Andy Roberts (202), Garfield Sobers (235), Michael
Holding   (249)   and  now  Joel  Garner (259).  Malcolm Marshall
(376) and Lance Gibbs (309) tower ahead of the  West  Indian  gi-
ants.

Soon after the resumption, attempting to cut  Walsh  against  the
bite  of  the  pitch, Slater was followed as if by a heat-seeking
missile, the ball appearing to strike his bat handle  and   thigh
before deflecting to Jimmy Adams at short leg.

Mark Waugh began with a glide off his legs to the fence, but like
a  salmon  rising  to  the  fly,  he  followed the delivery Walsh
dragged away from him outside the  off  stump,  and  Carl  Hooper
reeled in the catch at second slip.

Waugh`s form is a major concern at the moment. He is  ill-at-ease
against head-high deliveries, and the general uncertainty of Greg
Blewett offers little more comfort.

Walsh claimed the wickets of Slater and Waugh in four deliveries,
by  which  time the Antiguan crowd was performing handstands. The
West Indian pacemen`s general target area was the  ribcage,   and
they  kept the flak flying around Steve Waugh despite three hand-
some strokes square of the wicket until he sliced Kenneth  Benja-
min into his wicket.

In his 99th Test Boon had the short-lived satisfaction of  reach-
ing 7000 Test runs and passing Don Bradman`s 6996-run aggregate -
from 52 Tests -  before  a  beautifully-contrived slower   yorker
clipped  his  off  stump,  the  Tasmanian  aiming for mid-wicket.
Walsh`s mutual joy with Jimmy Adams at short leg  suggested   the
ploy worked a treat.

St Johns is the most enjoyable Test ground in the Caribbean these
days.  The  blasting drums make it the loudest, too. But just now
and then the bald-faced pitch did not live up to  its  reputation
and  the  ball  skidded  through low. A score of 300 might not be
enough for the West Indies.

Thanks :: Phil Wilkins, Sydney Morning Herald.
<END> Contributed by David.Mar (mar@Physics.usyd.edu.au)

====> Day 1, more
Walsh demolishes Australian batting - Greg Truman

Courtney Walsh took six for 54 in an   inspired   exhibition   of
fast  bowling on  Saturday as West Indies dismissed Australia for
216 on the first day of the second test.

Walsh bowled with fire and finesse to put  the  unofficial  world
champions  on  top  after  their abject capitulation in the first
test last Sunday.

Captain Richie Richardson, who has  borne  the   brunt   of   the
widespread  criticism  throughout  the  Caribbean after the first
test failure, asked Australia to bat on a hot, sunny day in front
of a capacity crowd.

It looked initially as if his gamble had   misfired   when   Aus-
tralia went to lunch at 82 for one after losing captain Mark Tay-
lor in the final over for 37.

But Walsh, so often the saviour of lost causes   for   the   West
Indies  in  recent years, picked up two wickets in his first over
after the break as Australia first faltered then succumbed to the
familiar West Indian pace barrage.

Source :: The Reuter Library Report
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 2, 9 Apr 95
The incomprehensible  second  Test  undertook  its  mid-afternoon
switchback  path  again  yesterday,  enabling Australia to finish
within breathing distance of the West Indies.

Steve Waugh, who dislocated his right shoulder in Lahore last Oc-
tober  yet  was  able  to dismiss Brian Lara and Carl Hooper in a
four-ball bonanza, described bowling out the West Indies for  260
as  a  superior  performance to anything achieved in the Barbados
Test win.

``Dismissing them for anything under 300 was a really good effort
on  that  pitch,`` he said. ``It`s easy to play well when you are
on top, but to come from behind showed a lot of character.  Bowl-
ing  them out for 260 was a better effort for us than anything on
the three days in Barbados.``

Australia, trailing by 44 runs on the first innings, were 0-16 at
stumps  in  their  second  innings.  In the late afternoon of the
second day at St Johns` Recreation Ground in Antigua, Mark Taylor
and  Michael  Slater  endured a torrid nine overs from Curtly Am-
brose and Courtney Walsh, during  which  Taylor  was struck   two
shuddering blows on the shoulder and one on the forearm.

After Ambrose cracked the unflinching Taylor on  the  shoulder  a
second  time,  the  fast  bowler  stood  at the edge of the pitch
glowering silently at the Australian captain.

Antigua`s king tides must have been on the afternoon run-in again
yesterday  as  this  unfathomable  Test plumbed rare shallows and
depths.  Nothing is predictable  about  it, everything   erratic,
save perhaps Lara`s majesty.

His world records suggested it, but he is the best batsman in the
world, superior even to India`s Sachin Tendulkar. A century was a
formality until  David  Boon`s  astonishing  left-handed  leaping
catch at mid-on to end his 102-ball innings. Lara struck 15 boun-
daries in his 88.

In Boon`s 99th Test, in which he has overtaken Sir Don  Bradman`s
Test  aggregate  if  not  his average, umpire Steve Bucknor asked
him, ``Are you 34 or 25?``

``To get a catch like that - at my age - is special,`` Boon  said
later. ``I thought I was a bit far away, but I got there.``

In discussing the dismissals of Lara and Hooper (11), Steve Waugh
said:  ``Brian  is always a challenge. The way he was playing to-
day, 375 did not look out of the question again. But I nipped him
in the bud.``

Lara attempted to  work  Waugh`s  medium-pacer  through  long-on,
striving  to  loft  it  over Boon, only for the veteran to hold a
one-handed catch Mark Waugh might have taken.

Steve Waugh always fancies his chances against Hooper, the  other
form  batsman  in the side. Having been whipped away through mid-
wicket minutes before, he again varied his pace to confuse  Hoop-
er, who gently chipped it low to Brendon Julian at mid-wicket.

It is the most inexplicable match. The Recreation Ground pitch is
slow-paced,  inclined to keeping low, but its behaviour was truer
than on the first day when Australia were 0-82 and  all out   for
216 on a good pitch 39 overs later.

The West Indies charged to 1-106,  with  Lara  positively  flying
along,  only  to  lose their last eight wickets for 92 runs in 31
overs.

Throughout, the fast bowling has  been  borderline  intimidation.
Glenn McGrath gave Kenny Benjamin and Winston Benjamin two bounc-
ers each in the one over and umpires Bucknor and  David  Shepherd
were  happy.   The batsmen slowly wilted in the Test heat, making
for the most brutally absorbing match.

The stature of new-ball bowler Paul Reiffel  continues  to  rise.
He  was total reliability, rocking in, prising out Junior Murray,
Am- brose and Walsh in three overs while leg-spinner Shane  Warne
had occasional  rather  than  regular  success, including weeding
out Keith Arthurton after being clouted for two sixes.

``The big thing is we`re not relying on Warney to  take  all  the
wickets,`` Steve Waugh said. ``The other guys are bowling just as
well. They look just as dangerous. It makes Warney relax a little
bit more. The guys realise that if they bowl well here, they have
a huge opportunity over the next couple  of  years to  cement   a
spot.``

But Waugh predicted Warne`s day would dawn in  the  West  Indies,
declaring:  ``He will go through these guys on at least one occa-
sion this trip. I don`t know when it will be.  It might  be   the
fourth  innings  of  this game. But you never bet against Warney.
He`s probably not bowling as well as  he  has for  the  last   18
months, but the guy is only human. He still has taken eight wick-
ets in three innings.``

Thanks :: Phil Wilkins, Sydney Morning Herald.
<END> Contributed by David.Mar (mar@Physics.usyd.edu.au)

====> Day 2, more
Lara Caught Short - Mike Selvey

CONSIDERING  West  Indies,  one  down   in   the   series,    had
dismissed  Australia  for  216 on the first day at the Recreation
Ground, they failed to capitalise.

Despite a thrilling 88 from Brian Lara -  a  mere  one-act   play
compared to his lavish production last year - they were dismissed
for 260, a lead of only 44, which Australia, in nine torrid overs
at the end, had reduced by 16. They will not be displeased: it is
West Indies who must bat last.

Not for the first time on this  ground   Lara   batted   like   a
dream,  his  101  ball innings providing 2 1/2 hours worth of ex-
quisite strokeplay as brimful of good things while it lasted   as
his world record 375 here less than a year ago.

In all, 60 of his runs came in boundaries to  all  parts  of  the
ground, each one a jewel of precise placement, chronometer timing
and unseemly power for such a small man.

Shane Warne was pulled over a vacant  midwicket;  the  left   arm
seam  of Brendon Julian just appeared to float into the slot, and
one ball from Glenn McGrath,   fractionally  outside  off  stump,
seemed  to  give  him myriad options where other mortals would be
content with one. Back foot drive? No, man placed for that.   How
about  the  square cut, then? No, two men in the vicinity. So in-
stead he stood up and angled it down to the third  man  boundary.
That is indecent batting.

He survived a close call when Greg   Blewett   threw   down   his
stumps  as  he and Jimmy Adams took a tight single, but it took a
very special piece of  cricket to remove him.

Steve Waugh, whose integrity had  been  brought   into   question
after  his  gully  catch  had  got  rid  of  Lara  in Bridgetown,
delivered a devious slower ball from  round the wicket that  Lara
clipped  a little early towards short midwicket, where David Boon
was lurking.  Somehow he got aloft, flung out his left hand,  and
a wonderful catch stuck. Lara, another world record down the pan,
looked mortified.

Yet again, though, tribute has to be  paid  to  Australian   per-
sistence for despite Lara`s onslaught, they chipped away, holding
what chances came their way and gradually eroding the order.

Source :: The Guardian
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 3, 10 Apr 95
A ``thrower`` accusation hung over the second Test  as  Australia
waded  through a rain-broken day to establish a precarious 90-run
lead yesterday.

A former international said of one fast bowler in the match: ``It
was  blatant.  On  the TV highlights of the game filmed from mid-
off, it was like watching a baseball pitcher.``

For some years, rumours about a ``chucker`` in  the  West  Indian
team  have  been  prevalent, the accusations revolving around his
faster delivery. Accusations are one thing. Proof is another.

Australian coach Bob Simpson, back in the fold after  a  week  in
hospital in Barbados, made no accusation other than to say it was
not the duty of a team to denounce any chucker.

``It`s nothing to do with the team. It`s up to the umpire or even
the  referee to accept the responsibility they`ve got,`` he said.
``Their job is to police all aspects of the law. It`s always  one
they have been reluctant to do.``

Simpson said that while an umpire ruling out a batsman lbw  could
have  a dramatic effect on his career, likewise the no-balling of
a bowler for throwing would have an important effect, saying: ``I
don`t see any difference. I never have.``

``I have always been a strong advocate that if a person does  not
deliver  a ball a fair way, he is outside the laws of the game,``
he said.

Following the loss of  both  openers,  Mark  Taylor  and  Michael
Slater,  while  still  in  first innings debt, David Boon (60 not
out) and Mark Waugh (42 not out) roped together their   resources
of  145  Tests`  experience to clamber up the mountain to provide
Australia with a tenuous, still vulnerable, but precious lead.

Australia are 2-134 after trailing by 44 runs on  the  first  in-
nings in a tight, tough, tense, match. Today is a rest day.

Two days remain for a decision, and while the West Indies are en-
titled  to  warm  favouritism to win the Test and level the four-
match series, Australia could turn the  stiletto, especially   if
this pair continue their bountiful 91-run partnership.

Waugh began with a six from Courtney Walsh to fine  leg,  took  a
slow  ``beamer``  on  the  shoulder  the  following  ball when it
slipped from Walsh`s hand, was struck near the elbow by the  same
bowler and carried on resolutely in a 108-minute effort which re-
stored spirit to a team beginning to sg at the knees.

Walsh`s ``beamer`` appeared accidental. The ball was wet,  bowled
as  a slower delivery and the veteran immediately apologised. But
English umpire David Shepherd belatedly called no-ball and warned
Walsh about the delivery.

Simpson believes that with the Recreation Ground  pitch  dry  and
hard, but lacerating from the Australian boot spikes, leg-spinner
Shane Warne will emerge in sharp focus on the last day.

``It will obviously spin,`` he said. ``There`s a hell of a lot of
roughage  from  the southern end and it is playing up and down. I
felt it would be a four-day match after the first innings scores,
but  obviously  it won`t be now. A lead of 250 would be very hard
to get.``

With three rain interruptions costing 221 minutes` play,  and  no
means  available  to  make  up  the  lost time, the disrupted day
threatened to be disastrous for  Australia  after  Mark  Taylor`s
early  attempted  hook misfired and he brushed the leg-side catch
to Junior Murray.

Walsh`s  vicious,  rearing,  inswinging  delivery  which  claimed
Slater,  however,  was the ball of the match. The opener did well
to fend it off only for Richie  Richardson  to  hold a   stunning
right-hand, swooping catch at third slip when it appeared to have
eluded him.

Boon and Waugh had some understandable apprehension,  but  Curtly
Ambrose  still  lacked  his malevolence of recent years and Walsh
did not appreciate Richardson`s decision to swing him to the Fac-
tory  Road end when his early wicket-taking was achieved from the
Members` end.

Eventually, almost as a late dismissive  gesture,  Wlash  reduced
his  bowling  approach to avoid skating across a slippery section
covered in sawdust and was not the same potent force.

Initially leaden-footed, Boon warmed  to  his  task  and  in  133
minutes  cracked  away  some  robust  square cuts for eight boun-
daries, while Waugh struck five boundaries and the six.

Drying the pitch Caribbean-style was in evidence when a tin  con-
taining  burning coal and paraffin was placed over an apple-sized
patch of moisture, not in a dangerous area. The operation was su-
pervised  by  referee  Majid Khan, umpire Steve Bucknor and coach
Simpson.

Thanks :: Phil Wilkins, Sydney Morning Herald.
<END> Contributed by David.Mar (mar@physics.usyd.edu.au)

====> Day 3, more
Boon, Mark Waugh Shore Up Aussies - Craig Cozier

David Boon and Mark Waugh added an unbeaten 91  for   the   third
wicket  to shore up Australia on a rainy Monday, the third day of
the second Cable and Wireless cricket  Test against the West  In-
dies.

On a day when 56 overs were lost to  rain   in   three   separate
stoppages,  Australia  ended  on  134 for two, a lead of 90 going
into Tuesday`s rest day.

Boon, the 34-year-old Tasmanian, was undefeated 60 and Waugh 42.

Fast bowler Courtney Walsh, West Indies` hero in  the  first  in-
nings with six wickets, struck twice in the early play.

Australia`s openers had added just six runs  to  their  overnight
score of 16 when Walsh removed their captain, Mark Taylor. He was
out hooking for the second time in the match, this  time  gloving
to wicket-keeper Junior Murray down the leg side.

The first rain interruption came just 15   minutes   later   with
Australia  31 for one. Umpires Steve Bucknor of Jamaica and David
Shepherd of England called an early lunch and play resumed  under
overcast skies 25 minutes late after the break.

Showers were imminent, but Jamaican Walsh broke through  again in
last of the 14 balls possible.

He claimed the wicket of Michael Slater, magnificently  caught by
Richie   Richardson   at   third   slip,  leaping full stretch to
clutch the chance one-handed, wide and low to his right.

Slater made 18 and his dismissal left the tourists  struggling at
43  for two, still one run short of erasing the first innings de-
ficit.

Boon and Mark Waugh carefully negotiated  a   further   20-minute
burst  of  play   between lunch and tea when the West Indies fast
bowlers, led by Walsh, were firing on all cylinders.

They saw off the threat and blossomed as the  sun  returned  when
they  resumed  for  the  final time at 60 for two. An hour and 25
minutes remained to face 21 overs and the experienced pair shift-
ed the initiative back to Australia.

Boon, in his 99th Test, and Waugh, in his 46th,  saw  off   Walsh
and  took to the less testing offerings of the Benjamins, Winston
and Kenneth.

Boon has faced 99 balls and hit eight fours in  136  minutes   at
the  crease.   Waugh`s needed 68 balls for his 42, which included
five fours and a  hooked  six  off  Walsh,  and  has lasted   110
minutes.

Walsh`s two wickets for 39 runs off 15  overs   represented   the
only successes for the West Indies.

Source :: AP Worldstream
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 3, more
Simpson`s happy about Australia`s chances

Australian coach Bob Simpson said: ``I  think   for   the   first
time in the match you could probably say we are on top.``

The Australian camp expected the wicket to  play  perfectly   for
leg spinner Shane Warne on the last two days after Tuesday`s rest
day.

Simpson, looking ahead to West Indies batting  last,  said  ``250
would be hard to get.

``It`s obviously going to spin ... and it`s going  to   play   up
and down.``

The Australians resumed on 16 for no  wicket,   still   28   runs
behind, realising the loss of early wickets would hand the advan-
tage to West Indies.

As cautious as he was, Taylor could not resist  the   hook   shot
and for the second time in the match it cost him his wicket.

He added only one run to his overnight score  before  touching on
a rearing Courtney Walsh delivery to wicketkeeper Junior Mur- ray
with the Australians on 22 and still in debit.

Rain forced players from the field with Australia  31   for   one
and the umpires opted for an early lunch.

Occasional downpours prevented further play in  the  second  ses-
sion except for two brief stints.

The first 12-minute resumption was long enough for  Richardson to
take one of the best test  cricket  catches in many years.

Rain was falling as Slater  received  a   short   delivery   from
Walsh.   He  tried  to  play a controlled shot in the air wide of
gully, but it went close enough to Richardson at third  slip  for
the West Indies captain to get a sniff of a catch.

He quickly shuffled in the direction of the  ball  before  taking
off, leaping high to his right, arm outstretched.

The Recreation Ground crowd  was  astonished  that   he   got   a
finger  to  the  ball let alone clasp it for Slater`s demise with
the Australian score on 43.

After tea the rain cleared allowing West Indies   21   overs   to
pick up a few  more Australian wickets.

But Waugh and Boon found their best form of the  tour  and  moved
Australia into a sound position by stumps.

Source :: The Reuter Library Report
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 3, more
Home record the spur for Walsh and his fading giants -
Mike Selvey

THE 21 OVERS bowled on Monday evening,  when  the   showers   fi-
nally  relented  and  David  Boon and Mark Waugh added 90 for the
third Australian wicket, could prove pivotal in  this match   and
series, and a watershed in West Indies Test history.

Until now neither batsman has been in  prime  form.   Boon,   the
chunky bedrock of the Australian batting for the past decade, has
been so short of runs since his century against England  at  Mel-
bourne that many suspected his powers were on the wane.

Nor, with Steve Waugh`s return to  bowling  fitness,   has   Mark
Waugh`s  continued  place in the side been a foregone conclusion.
Despite healthy  averages  both  twins  have suspect   techniques
against pace and roughing them up is a natural consequence.

Steve, apparently the more vulnerable,   has   shown   the   more
steel  - but it was Mark who joined Boon on a pitch made friskier
by the rain and a long steaming under the covers, with  Australia
still a run in arrears and Courtney Walsh at his passionate best.

Had they not survived, Australia could have folded  and  West In-
dies   might   have  been  looking  at  victory today and a level
series.  Instead Boon clipped and carved a deadpan 60 while Waugh
compiled  42.  His juices flowing after hooking Walsh for six, he
survived the accidental beamer next ball and saw  his  confidence
grow by the over.

If they can extend their partnership   this   morning   and   the
rest  of the Australian batting can draw strength from it, a lead
of 250 - another 160 runs or so - ought to  be sufficient,   with
heaps of rough and a last-day pitch, for Shane Warne to bowl them
to a second win.

Much will depend today on how hard West  Indies  fight  to   pro-
tect   a   proud   unbeaten  home record that goes back 22 years.
The response of Walsh and Curtly Ambrose will be crucial.

In the absence of Richie Richardson this   past   year   it   has
been   Walsh,   as   captain,   who has provided the inspiration.
The Jamaican lifted them to a series-saving win in Chandighar  in
De- cember  and  hauled them to an equally improbable but politi-
cally vital win against South Africa on their first visit to  the
Carib- bean.

It was Walsh who insisted that the West  Indies  crest  be  rein-
stated  on  the  shirt  -breast,  where it had been replaced by a
sponsor`s logo, and Walsh who roused himself in the first innings
of  this match when Australia threatened to be front-runners from
the starting pistol.

Walsh is a mighty competitor who recognises the game`s unify- ing
power   here,   the   status   a   successful team confers to all
Caribbean people and the duty it expects from those who fight for
West Indian supremacy.

The need to protect their home record goes  beyond  a  mere  Test
series  but this is no longer a fearsome West Indies attack to be
whispered about in hushed tones. Ambrose is recovered  from  sur-
gery  but  has so far been a shadow of the bowler regarded as the
most clinical destroyer in the  game.  He  has  not looked   fit;
perhaps  the  indefinable  spark  that makes a genius is gone for
ever.

Walsh and the whole of his team must know that the end of  an era
is  ever  closer  at  hand, and there is no greater burden in the
game than having to defy that.

Source :: The Guardian
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 4, 12 Apr 95
Rain Curtails Evenly Poised Australia, West Indies Battle
- Craig Cozier

Rain forced an early close to the fourth   Cable   and   Wireless
cricket   test  Wednesday,  leaving the West Indies and Australia
delicately balanced in the fourth day of play.

Heavy showers that swept across the  Antigua  Recreation   Ground
during the tea interval saturated the outfield and caused umpires
Steve Bucknor and David Shepherd to call off play. By then,  Aus-
tralia had extended their overnight 134 for two to 273 for seven,
a lead of 229 going into Thursday`s final day.

Steve Waugh, the 29-year-old New South  Wales  right-hander,   in
his  74th test and 14th against the West Indies, was unbeaten 52,
in 211 minutes batting. He has hit two fours and a six.

West Indies grabbed the early advantage  on   a   gripping   day,
fast bowler  Winston Benjamin supplying two early breakthroughs.

In the day`s fifth over, he removed  David   Boon,   leg   before
playing no shot to an inswinger.

Boon, 60 overnight, added just seven  runs   before   his   third
wicket  stand  of  106 with Mark Waugh was ended. The 34-year-old
Tasmanian batted 161 minutes and hit nine fours.

Waugh followed 13 runs later, at 162, bowled middle  stump  by an
inswinging  Benjamin  Yorker.  Waugh hit seven fours and a six in
his 61.

Steve Waugh and Greg Blewett revived the innings   in   a   fifth
wicket  partnership  of  34 when off-spinner Carl Hooper struck a
decisive blow five minutes before lunch.

Blewett was excellently caught by Stuart Williams  low   to   his
left at first slip for 19.

After the break, Waugh and wicket-keeper Ian  Healy  shifted  the
edge  back  to  the  visitors  by adding 58 for the sixth wicket.
They saw off the occasional spin of Hooper and  left-armer  Jimmy
Adams  and  comfortably  resisted the second new ball when it was
belated- ly taken.

But as Australia  threatened  to  take   command,   West   Indies
struck  twice  just  ahead of tea to put the contest back on even
keel.

Ian Healy made a typically dogged 26 before he edged to Hooper at
second slip to become fast bowler Courtney Walsh`s third wick- et
in the innings, to add to his first innings haul of six.

Then, in the last over before the interval,  Brendon  Julian  was
run  out  by  Adams`  throw  to  the wicket-keeper as Steve Waugh
sought a third run on his flick to deep square leg.

By then, dark clouds had swept across  the   ground   and   heavy
rain wiped out what was set to be an enthralling final session.

Walsh`s three wickets for 75 runs off 32 overs   was   the   best
West  Indian  effort,  while  Winston Benjamin had two for 65 off
20.3 overs.

Source :: AP Worldstream
<END> Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)

====> Day 4, more

A rainbow filled the sky over Antigua minutes after a rain squall
intruded on the second Test yesterday in a day of mystifying cap-
taincy by Richie  Richardson  and  monolithic batting  by   Steve
Waugh.

Stabilised by Waugh`s 3 1/2-hour innings of 52 not out, Australia
inched their way to 7-273 for a 229-run lead with a day remaining
for a decision. But the pot of gold is still as deeply buried  as
on the first day of this mystery tour of a Test.

On the fourth day, with the session after tea lost due  to  heavy
rain, it was Waugh`s unrivalled spirit of resistance which raised
smelling salts to Australia`s nostrils after the first-hour  loss
of  David Boon (67) and Mark Waugh (61) left the tourists sagging
at 4-162. At that time, with 11  hours remaining  and   Australia
leading by only 118 runs, the likelihood of a West Indies victory
to level the series loomed as large as Nelson`s Dockyard.

As much as Waugh`s partnerships with Greg Blewett (19), Ian Healy
(26)  and  Brendon Julian (6), which ate up more than three hours
of precious West Indian time, the perplexing bowling strategy  of
Richardson confounded and confused his team.

In just under four hours`  play,  Richardson  gave  his  indolent
match-winner Curtly Ambrose (0-42) just seven overs, ignoring his
Antiguan teammate for the second new ball, and bypassed   Winston
Benjamin  (2-65) for all but the last 10 minutes of the afternoon
session after his first-hour honours of dismissing Boon and  Mark
Waugh in three overs.

A  despairing  former  West  Indian  Test  batsman  said:  ``It`s
Winston`s  day.  He  got the two best batsmen out in less than an
hour, and he`s not been used for 2 1/2 hours.``

Steve Waugh is serious, never smug.  Justifiably  well-satisfied,
he said: ``There`s a big chance of a win out there. Another 30 or
40 runs would be nice for us. Hopefully we can  declare  and  set
them  about 270 from 70 overs. That`s the perfect scenario. If we
get 70 to 75 overs at them, I think we can bowl them out.

``The wicket`s doing enough and there`ll be a lot of pressure  on
their guys to perform. If we bowl well, catch well, we`ll win the
game. If we don`t,  we`ll  draw  or  could  lose  the game.   The
situation`s perfect. If we`re good enough, we`re going to win.``

Waugh pointed to the significant turn which finger-spinners  Carl
Hooper  (1-14)  and  Jimmy Adams (0-16) extracted from the pitch,
and considered that leg-spinner Shane Warne could have his day in
the sun.

``It`s a good sign for us because they don`t put much work on the
ball,`` Waugh said. ``Hooper made the ball turn and bounce out of
the rough. There`s definitely signs it will do something   tomor-
row.  A  few  balls  kept  low from their pacemen.  It`s not easy
scor- ing runs if you bowl well.``

Waugh was in his element, scrapping and scratching  for  runs  in
the dog-eat-dog atmosphere. He pulled a six from left-arm tweaker
Adams soon after lunch and struck just two boundaries, the  aging
pitch suiting his game and cutting the fast men to size.

Waugh described it as ``hard work``, but it was good work, and he
loved  it. His only regret came right on tea when he took a third
run off Adams and saw Julian run  out  by  the  long throw   from
square leg to wicketkeeper Junior Murray.

Once again, Healy came to the party with a robust  82-minute  in-
nings, putting on 58 runs with Waugh. Earlier, Blewett produced a
brilliant cover drive and appeared to be returning to  his   best
after a slow start before cutting Hooper moments before lunch for
a wide catch to be snared by the agile, quick-witted Stuart  Wil-
liams, diving at slip.

Waugh said: ``In the context of the game, we could not afford  to
be  too  extravagant  out  there and play too many shots. If we`d
lost one or two more wickets, they would have been well on   top.
It   was  a  tough battle and neither side was giving in.  It was
al- ways going to be tough to get runs. We had   to  grind   them
out.   Looking at the position of the game, we`re probably better
placed than they are at the moment.``

Boon and Mark Waugh came together with Australia still  ``in  the
red``  and  added  106 in just over two hours before Benjamin de-
ceived Boon with an in-swinger, trapping him with his  bat   over
his shoulder, and then yorked Waugh with another late in-ducker.

How times have changed. The very shadow of Steve Waugh  approach-
ing the wicket in the past would have had Ambrose pushing off the
white-washed wall of the Viv Richards Pavilion.  Now,  Richardson
has Ambrose prowling the outfield fence or amusing himself at ex-
tra cover.

Generally, the signs are  excellent  for  Australia.  Sadly,  the
ground  was so saturated and the drying devices so primitive that
more rain on the last day may deprive Australia of a 2-0 lead.

Thanks :: Phil Wilkins, Sydney Morning Herald.
<END> Contributed by David.Mar (mar@Physics.usyd.edu.au)
