Thin pace attack bothers Windies
Trevor Chesterfield
14 December 1998
PORT ELIZABETH (South Africa) - As the West Indies cut short their
stay in Port Elizabeth by a day and took a midday flight to Durban,
the tourist have finally admitted their pace fire power lacks the
penetration of South Africa's.
With concern over the availability of opening batsman Philo Wallace
for the games in Chatsworth and Pietermaritzburg this week, the
tourists very average batting performances so far this tour has
exposed a serious weakness in their make up.
More disturbing for the touring team's management, however, is an
admission the Windies selectors have seriously misread the strength of
the back up fast bowlers and may yet try and find a way to call on the
services Vasbert Drakes to boost their thin pace resources.
This has emerged after Nixon McLean and Mervyn Dillon were found
wanting on the green top prepared for the second test at St George's
Park where the Windies were given a serious bruising by the defeat of
178 runs inside three days.
With Hansie Cronje, the South African captain, already commenting that
the pitches at Kingsmead and Newlands are ``likely to give us results
at both venues'' the Windies tour management could find themselves in
serious trouble as Franklyn Rose has yet to impress in any of the
matches where he has turned his arm over.
As it is there is an accusation that Dillon was preferred to Drakes
because he came from Trinidad, the team for which Brian Lara leads and
plays, while Drakes is a Bajan. According to insiders Drakes was told
by the selectors ``on the advice of the captain (Lara)'' not considered
for this tour.
As players earn no contract money for playing in their local
first-class tournament, still without a sponsor after two years,
Drakes accepted the Border contract. Whether the SuperSport Series log
leaders are prepared top let him go is another matter. Lara indicated
there were ``three reserves in South Africa'' when asked if any
replacements were being considered. Drakes and Ottis Gibson
(Griqualand West) are two, but just who the third player is could
provide an interesting guessing game. Eldine Baptiest (Eastern
Province) and Mark Lavine (North West) are the other two.
There has also been criticism of Lara's handling of the replacement
issue for Jimmy Adams. It has been argued that all-rounder Keith
Arthurton would have provided better cover than Floyd Reifer, whose
contribution in the second test at St George's Park was negligible.
As for Wallace's fitness, the coach, Malcolm Marshall, said they would
monitor the batsman's illness, said to be a stomach viral
infection. He had blood tests yesterday morning and they were awaiting
reports before deciding on the next move. But he will not be sent home
to recover as the tall, cheerful opener from Barbados, was ``much
better'' yesterday when the side was given the day off.
Marshall and team manager Clive Lloyd declined to discuss the
possibility that Drakes would be seconded to the side for the third
and fourth tests. This is despite Drakes being seen by some members
of the touring party as the best support bowler for Curtly Ambrose and
Courtney Walsh.
Drakes at least bowls a channel and knows how to put the ball in the
right area, which is more than McLean and Dillon could do at St
George's Park.
Lara, however, reflecting on the defeat, said the West Indies ``had to
play as a team from now on and the batsmen, and that includes me, have
to go out there and learn how to ``bat for 150 overs in an innings''.
It was his view that the batsmen had to learn to put ``big totals on
the board in the matches before the test matches and there is a
serious need to make a much bigger effort to play as a team''.
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