ZCU President's XI v Indians
Reports by John Ward
2-4 October 1998
Day 1: Kumble scalps five
ZCU President's XI 156 all out (M A Vermeulen 46; A Kumble 5/35)
Indians 138/2 (A D Jadeja 57*, R R Singh 34*)
The Indians enjoyed themselves on Sunrise Sports Club's inaugural day
as a first-class venue, finishing only 18 runs behind with eight
wickets in hand. The home team, captained by Warwickshire's
Zimbabwean Trevor Penney, batted on winning the toss, but never came
to grips with fine bowling from Anil Kumble on a very slow pitch.
The pitch was described by Penney as being 'not bad', but slower than
most English pitches, and the lack of bounce made run-scoring
difficult. Few of the side's young batsmen have much experience
beyond the limited-over game, and neither the pitch nor Kumble's
bowling was conducive to learning. Batting on it required patience
and application, virtues ignored in one-day cricket, and this was
beyond most of the home players.
Top scorer was Mark Vermeulen, recently returned from a successful
season with Alderley Edge in Cheshire. He wisely took his time to
play himself in and displayed some polished strokes, with several
effortless cover drives being particularly impressive. Neil Johnson
(21) used his feet well and kept the score ticking over, while Bryan
Strang (15) contributed some typically lusty blows at number ten. The
others were unable to break the shackles, with Trevor Madondo (14) and
Gus Mackay (1) caught in the deep trying to do so.
Kumble, helped by Harbhajan Singh and Rahul Sanghvi (two wickets
each), was more than most of the home batsmen could handle. While the
pace bowlers soon decided that their best bet was to rely on line and
length and wait for the batsmen to make a mistake, the spinners bowled
with genuine guile and were never mastered. Perhaps the batsmen could
have helped their cause, though, by treating the few loose balls more
severely and paying more attention to pushing into the gaps for
singles.
The Indians found scoring considerably easier, with the home bowlers
showing less accuracy than the tourists had done. Bryan Strang, who
had Sidhu lbw, and Mark Vermeulen, to whom Dravid played on, both took
wickets as soon as they came on, but that was their team's lot for the
day. Sidhu and Jadeja opened, and it is expected that they will do so
again in the Test next week. Jadeja and Robin Singh both drove
powerfully during the closing overs, and the small crowd will have to
wait until tomorrow to see Tendulkar bat.
Day 2: A masterpiece by Tendulkar
President's XI 156 and 106/5
Indians 400/5 dec (A D Jadeja 61, R R Singh 47, S R Tendulkar 70,
N R Mongia 70*, A Kumble 100*).
Statistically the highlight of the day was the unbroken
sixth-wicket stand of 160 between Nayan Mongia and Anil Kumble,
which included a century by the latter. For those who saw it,
though, the abiding memory will be an innings of genius by Sachin
Tendulkar.
Tendulkar was required at the crease early in the morning as
Jadeja was caught in the slips after adding only four to his
overnight score. He immediately showed his cricketing acumen by
taking two runs to Everton Matambanadzo fielding in the deep; a
less observant batsman would have taken only a single, but
Tendulkar had already observed that Matambanadzo is at present
unable to throw because of his injured shoulder. He then hit two
powerful boundaries off Gus Mackay, an off-drive off the front
foot, followed by a cover drive off the back foot; in the
following over came a front-foot drive for four through extra
cover. He was clearly out to enjoy himself, but kept the ball
entirely on the ground except when aiming to hit it for six. His
first six soared far beyond the midwicket boundary, a fierce pull
off a not unduly short ball from Bryan Strang, which even the
bowler had to applaud.
On 34, he slashed fiercely at the left-arm spin of Dirk Viljoen
and was dropped by wicket-keeper Craig Gurr, the sort of chance
which leaves the keeper with no hope of adjusting. It was a rare
mistake by Gurr, whose keeping is of the Bob Taylor school of the
immaculate, reliable and unobtrusive -- as indeed is his batting.
Tendulkar immediately celebrated his escape with two more
powerful boundaries and a six over the sightscreen.
Not since Brian Barbour memorably put to the sword a Natal attack
led by Vintcent van der Bijl in the 1971/72 season has a batsman
scored a first-class century before lunch in this country.
Nothing seemed so certain that Tendulkar would be the successor
to this feat, performed before he was born, when he tried to hit
Ray Price for six over long-on, only to put the ball into the
hands of the fielder there, appropriately Viljoen. His 70
contained 4 sixes and 10 fours and came off 53 balls in 68
minutes; the corresponding figures for reaching his fifty were 37
and 53.
Whatever followed was almost doomed to be a case of 'after the
Lord Mayor's show', but in fact Mongia and Kumble took the
opportunity to get some invaluable practice for the Test
beginning on Wednesday. Kumble played the role of senior partner
to add a century to his five wickets in the first innings,
driving particularly well. The home side's pace attack found no
life in the pitch, and the spinners were not good enough to
trouble batsmen used to playing quality spin. The declaration
came about half an hour before tea as soon as Kumble reached
three figures, which coincidentally brought up the 400.
With the weather apparently settled, the home team appeared
doomed to inevitable defeat, the only question being whether they
could put up enough of a fight to force the tourists to bat
again. Doug Marillier and Mark Vermeulen began with an useful
opening partnership of 36, although both played some edgy shots.
Thereafter only Dirk Viljoen, unbeaten on 21 at the close, showed
real application. Neil Johnson and Trevor Penney both threw away
their wickets trying to hit over the top, and at the close, about
fifteen minutes early due to fading light, Gurr was doing his
usual steady job in support of Viljoen.
Day 3: Indians wrap up match
ZCU President's XI 156 and 173;
Indians 400/5 dec.
Indians won by an innings and 71 runs
It took the Indians just under an hour to take the last five wickets
in the President's XI second innings and bring the match to an end.
Anil Kumble took the last four wickets in quick succession, thereby
achieving the rare all-round feat of scoring a century and taking ten
wickets in the same match, the first time this has been achieved on
Zimbabwean soil.
At least the vibrant crowd of several hundred, mainly of Asian origin,
had something to cheer, thanks to a lusty innings from Bryan Strang,
who hit out boldly to score 48 off 39 balls in 36 minutes, mainly off
Harbhajan Singh and Sanghvi. His defiant innings contained 2 sixes
and 5 fours.
The remaining batsmen put up little fight. Dirk Viljoen was out
almost immediately, trying to sweep Harbhajan before he got his eye
in; the ball came from the top edge of his bat and rebounded off his
helmet to silly point. It is disappointing that such a dedicated and
talented player should continually fail to do himself justice in
first-class cricket; part of the problem is that so little first-class
cricket is played in Zimbabwe that players like Viljoen do not gain
the necessary experience in building an innings.
Craig Gurr for the second time, batting at number seven, remained
undefeated, on 13. His batting, like his wicket-keeping, is
unobtrusive but very reliable, and with more experience he will
doubtless be able to add more strokes to his concentration. He has
been out of cricket for several years, but was 'discovered' by Dave
Houghton while playing in a friendly match and persuaded to return.
Already he is perhaps next in line for a Test place should current
national wicket-keeper Andy Flower suffer an injury.
After Strang departed, bowled trying to hit Kumble over the leg- side
field, the unorthodox leg-spinner wrapped up the tail in no time at
all. Gus Mackay, on his return to the pavilion after being given out
lbw, said it was the fastest delivery he had ever received from a
medium-pacer!
Probably the national selectors will have learned little from this
match. Gurr and Vermeulen alone did much with the bat; the pace
bowlers found little joy in a deadly slow pitch; and the spinners did
not turn the ball sharply enough to bother the tourists' batsmen. It
did demonstrate the need of more first-class cricket in the country to
give Zimbabwean batsmen the opportunity of learning how to build an
innings.
Source: CricInfo
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