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ARTCILE: On the Masters Cup Tournament (D.Pringle) - 19 Mar 1995
Masters brave the big heat; Derek Pringle revels in a blast from
the cricket past in Bombay - Derek Pringle
IT WAS a week when the body screamed out more than the fans.
Unlike the players, they mainly stayed at home, sensibly avoiding
the humidity and ricocheting balls at the World Masters Cricket
Cup in Bombay. Satellite TV is Asia`s largest growth industry
and a purported 200 million people watched the action beamed back
from the Brabourne stadium, where the West Indies - average age
40 - easily defeated India - 41.6 years - in a high-scoring fi-
nal.
The West Indies were deserved winners, despite a flirtation
with the rules, after it was discovered that Gus Logie was six
months light of his 35th birthday, the minimum age stipulated for
being a "Master". On the field, no other team could match their
firepower with bat or ball, and their fielding was quite brilli-
ant. Viv Richards and Gordon Greenidge struck the ball with
majestic power,while Sylvester Clarke and Ezra Mosely were at
least a warp factor above the other pace bowlers.
Even from early on, their dominance had looked assured. Con-
firmation came on a chart pinned to the wall of the physio`s
room, comfortably the busiest cul-de-sac in the ample pavilion.
On the chart, big, bold ticks were placed against all the players
who had received treatment. Half-way through the week, almost
every team had approached double figures bar one, which had only
three ticks against it. Many reckoned the West Indies would run
their present Test team close in a one-day series.
England (average age 40.9) should have fared better, and a
perfect opportunity to upset the samosa cart and beat India in
the first semi-final was squandered after we had the home side
reeling at 88 for five. We may have had only five players on the
injury list, but our greatest asset on paper - six current county
cricketers - turned swiftly to liability, as they decided to dust
off winter cobwebs and treat the exercise as a pre-season net.
Where others pulverised the mainly gentle attacks - even your
correspondent managed a hearty 64 off 47 balls against the might
of South Africa - our admirable pros played the game properly,
biding their time and waiting for the moment to accelerate. It
never came, and with only 135 against the West Indies, England
registered the lowest score of the competition. `Twas ever thus.
We did manage one notable victory, however, against Aus-
tralia. They seemed to have taken things rather too seriously,
practising for over a week before others arrived. It proved of
little use. In their first game, the West Indies pulverised their
bowlers for 311 off the allotted 45 overs; and in the second we
turned them over despite the presence of those Pommie destroyers
of yesteryear, Alderman, Lawson and Thomson.
West Indies aside, the bowlers showed the most obvious signs of
time`s ravages. Not so the batters, and Graeme Pollock, at 51 one
of the few South Africans in Bombay to have played Test
cricket before their international ban in 1970, smote the ball
with power and precision.
Apart from a sublime century by Barry Richards against Eng-
land, which saw South Africa (average age 44.5) take third
place, Pollock scored the bulk of their runs. As Sunil Gavaskar
marvelled: "If this is what he`s like in his fifties, he must
have been some player in his twenties."
The hospitality would have been acceptable to royalty. Howev- er,
the competition was sandwiched by alcohol-free weekends: the
first when the local elections were held, the second when the
results were announced. This was to ensure the people could not
have their votes bought by offers of free hooch. That is no way
to ensure docility from a bunch of old warhorses nursing aching
limbs and gigantic thirsts. As one noted, the dry days proved an
even bigger handicap than the weather.
As ever in India, the daily minutiae of this teeming country
enthrall the visitor - unless you are wealthy enough to own a sa-
tellite dish. Then, with beer in one hand and remote in the oth-
er, you can join that new elite, the Bombay couch potato, and
watch the cricket Masters.
Source :: The Independent
Contributed by Ram.Krishnan (rkrishna@garnet.acns.fsu.edu)
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