Bashar and Mashud miss Twenty20 World Championship

Habibul Bashar didn’t make the cut for the Twenty20 World Championships © Getty Images

Habibul Bashar and Khaled Mashud are the major omissions from Bangladesh’s 30-member provisional squad for the Twenty20 World Championship in September. The squad also includes 13 uncapped players from the A team and the recently created National Cricket Academy.Bashar had relinquished the ODI captaincy after the recent series against India, and went through a lean patch with the bat, scoring 417 runs at an average of 21.94 during the 2006-07 season. Mashud lost his place to the uncapped Dhiman Ghosh, who joined Mushfiqur Rahim as the second wicketkeeper in the squad.”We have included a number of young cricketers in the provisional squad, to give them a break if they can prove their worth,” said Faruk Ahmed, the chief selector. The final 15-member squad will be selected by August 15.Squad
Mohammad Ashraful (capt), Aftab Ahmed, Shahriar Nafees, Tamim Iqbal, Tushar Imran, Shakib Al Hasan, Mashrafe Bin Mortaza, Farhad Reza, Mohammad Sharif, Tapash Baisya, Alok Kapali, Mohammad Rafique, Mahmudullah Riyad, Mushfiqur Rahim, Abdur Razzaq, Junaid Siddique, Jahurul Islam, Nazmus Sadat, Nazimuddin, Nadif Chowdhury, Suharwardi Shuvo, Syed Rasel, Nayeem Islam, Nazmul Hossain, Dhiman Ghosh, Shahadat Hossain, Dollar Mahmud, Mohammad Shahjada, Ziaur Rahman and Gazi Salahuddin

Pakistan squad rewarded for Twenty20 display

ICC World Twenty20 runners-up Pakistan rewarded for their impressive performance © Getty Images

The Pakistan squad were rewarded with cash bonuses at a reception organised by the PCB for reaching the final of the ICC World Twenty20.Each of the 15 Pakistan players and their eight officials were given Rs 2.5 million [approx. US$41,200]. “We may not have won the World Twenty20 title but our cricketers have made all of us proud by the way they played in the tournament,” Nasim Ashraf, the PCB chairman, said.The PCB also honoured Mohammad Yousuf for canceling his contract with the Indian Cricket League and returning to the national Test squad. Yousuf, 33, received $100,000 for signing a central contract with the board and a further $100,000 for becoming the ICC’s Test player of the year.The squad also received a cheque of Rs10 million [approx. US$164,000] from the Dubai-based Fortune Group owned by Mohammad Ali, a Pakistani businessman. The total prize money awarded was US$2 million.

Kerala's woes continue as they slump to 69/4

Vanka Pratap in the process of giving Hyderabad the upper hand with atimely century, put to shade a good bowling performance by Keralaseamer Tinu Yohannan (6 for 177). Such was the dominance of Hyderabadthat they declared at 489 for 9 well into the second day of theirSouth Zone Ranji Trophy match at the Nuclear Fuel Complex Ground atHyderabad on Thursday. Kerala at stumps were tottering at 69 for 4.Resuming where he left off the previous evening, Vanka Pratap (128)went on to complete his century after a 317 minute stay at the crease.His overnight partner Vinay Kumar (71) was not far behind, reachinghis half century off 85 balls. After forging a 146 run fourth wicketstand with Vanka Pratap, Vinay departed caught by Ananthapadmanabhanoff Ramprakash. Then Vanka Pratap fell leg before to Yohannan afteradding 45 run for the fifth wicket with PR Satwalkar. Stumper MSrinivas joined Satwalkar and put on 56 runs for the sixth wicket.After the fall of Satwalkar, the Hyderabad innings folded up with theaddition of 41 runs. In reply Kerala made a circumspect start with theopeners V Girilal (22) and MP Sorab (24) adding 48 runs. But disasterstruck Kerala when former Indian spinner Venkatapathy Raju wasintroduced into the attack. Raju drew first blood for Hyderabad in the18th over when he trapped Girilal in front. Two balls later he sentback Sorab in much the similar manner. Kerala’s woes were not to endthere as Raju in his very next over picked up the wicket of S Shankar(0) caught by Vinay Kumar. Kanwaljit Singh joined in the act and inhis very first over trapped Sunil Oasis (6) leg before.

Hafeez, Azhar stay away from camp due to Amir's presence

Pakistan’s ODI captain Azhar Ali and veteran allrounder Mohammad Hafeez have chosen to stay away from the ongoing conditioning camp in Lahore, apparently due to Mohammad Amir’s inclusion among the probables for the camp. Azhar confirmed that he had stayed away because of Amir and Pakistan’s team media manager, Agha Akbar, said Hafeez’s absence was also apparently for the same reason.Amir, who is in the selection mix after serving a five-year ban for his role in the 2010 spot-fixing scandal, was one of the 26 probables named for the pre-season conditioning camp in the build-up to the New Zealand tour. Both Hafeez and Azhar were playing domestic matches in Karachi and had missed the first three days of the camp which began on December 21. They were scheduled to join the camp on Thursday, but Agha Akbar confirmed that the pair did not train with the side.”Both are not joining the training camp today apparently because of Mohammad Amir,” Akbar told ESPNcricinfo.Azhar was more direct. “I will not attend the camp as long as Amir is there,” he said. “This is my decision and we are open to discuss with the PCB. I don’t want to comment on Hafeez’s decision, but we both have the same stance.'”In November, Hafeez had reportedly turned down an offer in the Bangladesh Premier League from the Chittagong Vikings franchise, who had enlisted Amir. Hafeez told ESPNcricinfo that he could not play “with any player who has tarnished and brought a bad name to the country”, but was open to accepting an offer from a different franchise. He stressed that this was his personal opinion.In November 2011, Amir – along with Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif – was sentenced in a London Court on charges conspiracy to accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat at gambling after a plot was uncovered in a sting operation to bowl deliberate no-balls in a Test against England in 2010. Amir was given a six-month jail sentence and served half of it at the Portland Young Offenders Institution in DorsetHe was also given a five-year ban by the ICC, and his suspension period formally ended on September 1 this year. Amir had been allowed to return to cricket ahead of schedule by the ICC in January and has since featured in Pakistan’s domestic T20 and first-class competitions. He was also a part of the BPL 2015-16, playing nine matches for the Chittagong Vikings franchise.

Tait expects to be dropped

Shaun Tait expects to be carrying the drinks once more in Adelaide following an underdone performance at the WACA © Getty Images
 

Shaun Tait concedes he has little chance of playing his first Test at his home ground in Adelaide after a disappointing performance in Australia’s loss to India at the WACA. Tait was called into a four-man pace attack having not played Test cricket since the 2005 Ashes, and he said he was underdone heading into the Perth match.Tait, who has played only three first-class matches this season including the Test, said when asked about his preparation that he was “a touch underdone, to be honest”. He went wicketless in 21 overs in his first match in whites since early December.”We are professional cricketers,” he told Adelaide’s Advertiser, “and we are training all the time and there’s probably no reason why we should be underdone. But the fact is I hadn’t had a whole lot of cricket under my belt and, obviously, there were limited opportunities to bowl as well due to over-rates.”He was remaining philosophical about his future at Test level, however, even if it’s not an immediate one. Although Tait has been named in Australia’s squad for Adelaide, Brad Hogg is the red-hot tip for a recall.”There will be another game where I get a chance to do well,” Tait said. “I’m not sure if I’ll keep my spot here. We’ll see how we go in the one-day games. Hopefully I’ll get the chance to be a part of the squad there again. But at the end of the day, it’s only a game and there will be another time where it might be a good day for me and the team as well.”However, Ricky Ponting said Australia had not written off Tait for the Adelaide Test starting on Thursday. “Tait also has the ability to bowl reverse-swing in Adelaide,” Ponting said in the . “With his low arm action and the amount of backspin he imparts on the ball, he usually makes it reverse swing more, and earlier, than other bowlers.”He didn’t have the impact I thought he would [in Perth], but he knows the conditions better than anyone else. He’s done a great job for South Australia there in recent years.”Ponting, however, kept his focus firmly on the future when it came to Tait. “He’s going to be a great asset to our team at some stage,” Ponting said. “The World Cup he had was amazing. I’ve got no doubt he’ll have the same impact as a Test bowler, as well. He’s got unbelievable raw pace. If he can produce that in a Test, he will knock the best players in the world over.”There were echoes here of the same praise he showered on Tait in the lead-up to the Melbourne Test, on Boxing Day, when the bowler was again overlooked as Australia chose to keep with the convention of three fast bowlers and a spinner.Michael Hussey, meanwhile, held out some hope of Tait retaining his place in the side. “I know Taity didn’t get any wickets in Perth but I don’t think they’re going to write him off just because of one performance,” Hussey told . “Obviously they’ve identified Taity as a future bowler for Australia. It’s good for him to get an opportunity in Perth and I’m sure he will come back better and stronger. If he does play in Adelaide in front of his home crowd I’m sure he’ll put in a better performance and then hopefully get a few wickets.”There have been comparisons between Tait and Lee in his earlier days and Hussey seemed to agree. “I think it’s something he’s working hard on and it’s something Brett Lee had to work on to be a bit more consistent. It’s a wonderful package to have in the team because he can crack a game open in the space of 20 minutes, sometimes in the course of a day. He can maybe be going for a few runs and suddenly everything clicks and he can take three or four wickets in a hurry which is incredibly attractive.”

Former bowler joins Victoria board

Cricket Victoria has its first female board member with Susan Crow, the CEO of Netball Victoria, joining the former spin bowler Paul Jackson as the board’s two newest appointments. Recent constitutional changes have allowed Cricket Victoria to appoint the pair from outside the group of elected directors.Crow has worked with a range of sporting bodies and was the executive director of Women’s Cricket Australia from 1995 to 2000, following a stint with the Victorian Women’s Cricket Association.Jackson is a former left-arm orthodox bowler who played 105 first-class games for Victoria and Queensland during the 1980s and 1990s. He also has a successful career in banking and is currently the director of natural resources in ANZ’s institutional banking division.”Sue Crow and Paul Jackson have a wealth of experience both on and off the field and I’m sure will be exceptional contributors to Victorian Cricket,” Cricket Victoria’s chairman Geoff Tamblyn said. “Their appointments capitalise on the opportunity to source talented, passionate people from beyond the traditional pathway and they will play key roles in helping us achieve future success.”

Thrill-a-minute cricket here to stay

West Indies’ first ever Twenty20 international, in Auckland, ended in a bowl-out © AFP

It’s the new wave of the international game, so we might as well get used to it. Those who measure the quality of a cricketer by his performances over the long haul, and have grown to tolerate one-dayers as a necessary evil, will probably look scornfully upon the two Twenty20 Internationals between the West Indies and England.Just as the 50 over version was ridiculed in its fledgling years as “pyjama cricket” with its coloured clothing and other gimmicks, so too has the 20 overs-per-side hybrid been dismissed as a glorified whipping session, where the subtleties and complexities of the real thing are abandoned in the quest to clear the boundary ropes almost every delivery to the accompaniment of ear drum-puncturing noise from the resident DJ.Given their stubborn refusal to accept those ODI innovations in the immediate aftermath of Kerry Packer’s revolutionary World Series Cricket, it is more than a little ironic that this latest consumer-friendly variety has really taken off in England, as evidenced by the overwhelming popularity of the domestic version since it was introduced to a very receptive audience four years ago.They were not the first to experiment with an even shorter form of one-day cricket, but it is fair to say that its instant success convinced the ICC of the need to get in on the action, seeing as almost every match, whether domestic or international, is played in front of capacity crowds that are representative of every strata of society, from hardcore party animals to whole families enjoying an evening’s entertainment.And that’s essentially what it is: entertainment. Not a complex series of sub-plots and individual skirmishes, all unfolding over time in a duel that has almost as many twists, turns and changes of pace as the most complex scandal-laced soap opera.In an era when those who have extra money can’t enjoy the luxury of much spare time, Twenty20 fills the breach almost perfectly.

The West Indian public embraced the Stanford 20-20 tournament last year © Joseph Jones

Most people were more preoccupied with the staggering sums of money shovelled out than the quality of the cricket played, but Allen Stanford’s ground-breaking Caribbean version of the frenetic spectacle proved such a hit last August in Antigua that, just for a moment, we almost believed his baseless boast that “West Indies cricket is back on track!” just after Narsingh Deonarine smashed a six off the penultimate ball of the final to give Guyana a pulsating victory over Trinidad and Tobago.It’s all about instant gratification, so there’s no point griping about it lacking the depth of the longer contest. That is not to say, of course, that any fool can dash to the nearest phone booth and be transformed Clark Kent-style into a Twenty20 superhero.Indeed, there is enough evidence to suggest that the concentrated demands of this extremely abbreviated style have contributed to even sharper fielding, while batsmen exposed to it on a regular basis are now more inclined to attack much earlier and with more clinical efficiency in both Tests and one-dayers.Still, it doesn’t appeal to all players, despite the financial rewards. Two years ago, Brian Lara commented that he didn’t enjoy having to swing for the hills almost from the word go when rain reduced an ODI against South Africa at the Queen’s Park Oval effectively to a Twenty20 affair.A number of Australia’s senior players, including skipper Ricky Ponting and 2007 World Cup final hero Adam Gilchrist, have cautioned against exposing younger players too much to a form of the game that could see them developing habits inimical to ensuring the country’s continued dominance at Test level.Still, Twenty20 has well and truly claimed its place in the cricketing world with the ICC approving the inaugural World Cup in South Africa in September. It is unlikely, however, given the increasing complaints about squeezing more matches into an already congested international schedule, that Twenty20 will enjoy the unfettered growth of its 50-over relation.Of course, as with anything else, it takes some getting used to, and Sunday’s 84-run humiliation at the hands of Derbyshire is not an encouraging sign for Chris Gayle’s reconstituted side. Hopefully, the final warm-up against the PCA Masters at Arundel would have proven more encouraging ahead of their first clash with Paul Collingwood’s England at The Oval in London.In their only Twenty20 International before the upcoming matches, the West Indies lost out in a tie-breaking bowl-out in Auckland at the start of their New Zealand tour in February of last year. It was an entertaining experience with a thrilling finale, but apart from the fact that it marked the farewell of allrounder Chris Cairns to international cricket, hardly anything else is worth remembering.But that’s Twenty20 for you: gratification without any real meaning, much like life in the 21st century. It is very much a game for the times.

India set 499 to win in Melbourne


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Andrew Symonds entertained the crowd with a quick 44 as Australia’s batsmen cruised to a 498-run advantage on the third day © Getty Images

You broke it, you fix it. That might well be the message from India’s bowlers to their batsmen after Australia set them 499 to win despite being challenged again by India’s attack at the MCG. At the close India had reached 0 for 6 with Rahul Dravid on 3 and Wasim Jaffer on 2. Ricky Ponting decided to make India face eight overs late in the day after Michael Clarke top scored in Australia’s 7 for 351 declared.Australia could easily have batted into the fourth day with perfect weather forecast for the rest of the match, as they discovered in Hobart last month that hefty totals can be chased with purpose. In Australia’s most recent Test Sri Lanka needed 507 in the fourth innings and although they fell 96 short, they may well have got there had Kumar Sangakkara’s superb innings not been incorrectly ended by Rudi Koertzen on 192. He was one brilliant batsman; India have several, and will not yet have written off their chances.But they were left to wonder how their strong batting line-up could have been dismissed for 196 on the second day when another 100 runs would have given them a much greater sniff of victory. Instead, they will need something special from the likes of Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and Dravid to avoid defeat as they seek not only the highest fourth-innings total to win a Test but also the largest fourth-innings total ever – winning or losing – in MCG Tests.The efforts of Clarke, Phil Jaques, Matthew Hayden and Andrew Symonds made India’s task the mountain that it is. Wickets were not infrequent through the third day but too often they came when the batsmen had already contributed. RP Singh and Zaheer Khan found some helpful swing – RP had Michael Hussey caught at slip for 36 – and Harbhajan Singh was much more of a threat than in the first innings but India also had a couple of costly moments of poor fortune.One came when Clarke was on 22 and nearly repeated his dismissal from the first innings. RP came around the wicket and gave Clarke a fullish ball well wide of off stump. On Wednesday Clarke did not move his feet while trying to drive and edged to slip – the only difference with today’s shot was that it flew through the vacant third-slip region and left Anil Kumble with his head in his hands.Less costly in terms of runs but better for the MCG crowd was when Billy Bowden played party-pooper for the fielding team for the second time in the match, spoiling India’s celebration with a no-ball call. Zaheer was thrilled after producing a pearler against Symonds on 7, angling across him, pitching on line, staying low and straigtening markedly to shatter his stumps.To add insult to injury Bowden’s call was spotted first by Symonds, who called Clarke through for a single after the ball had hurtled behind the celebrating wicketkeeper and slips. On the second day Dravid was the beneficiary of Bowden’s sharp eyesight – both calls were correct – when he edged Mitchell Johnson to slip. The Dravid case only cost Australia five runs but Symonds added a further 37 before Zaheer trapped him lbw to extract his revenge.

Harbhajan Singh picked up three important wickets but Australia’s lead just kept growing at the MCG © Getty Images

But in the meantime the MCG crowd had received its annual dose of late-December Symonds festivities, as he launched Kumble just over the boundary wide of long on and then made even better connection with a Harbhajan delivery that went ten rows back in the same direction. He added 82 with Clarke, who again proved adept at handling spin from both ends, until he advanced to Kumble, misread the wrong’un and was stumped.Like in the first innings Kumble was the man who had broken through when India needed a boost as he deceived Jaques (51) with a slower one that was driven straight back into his hands. Jaques had only just passed fifty for the sixth consecutive Test innings and he can equal the record of seven set by Everton Weekes, Andy Flower, and Shivnarine Chanderpaul – who just achieved the feat in the South Africa-West Indies Boxing Day Test – if he posts a half-century in the first innings in Sydney.Jaques and Hayden had given Australia another strong start, adding 80 for the first wicket as they tried to crush the spirits of India, who trailed by 147 after the first innings. Hayden made 47 and was in a far more dominating mood than during his first-innings century, using his trademark walk at the bowler to club boundaries straight and through midwicket against Zaheer.But when he tried to use his feet against spin Harbhajan deceived him with a shorter, turning delivery that forced his aerial straight drive higher than intended, allowing Ganguly to run around from long off to take the catch. Harbhajan found a better line and length than in the first innings and finished with 3 for 101 after Adam Gilchrist skied a catch to midwicket for a late 35 before Brad Hogg (35 not out) and Brett Lee (11 not out) closed out the innings.Harbhajan also accounted for Ponting, who fell to offspin for the third time in as many Tests this season after Muttiah Muralitharan caused him problems last month. Ponting was on 3 when he was surprised by extra bounce and the ball caught the edge as he prodded forward, allowing Dravid to snaffle the chance at first slip.When Ponting departed there appeared to be a chance India might rattle through Australia and stop them amassing a match-winning lead – only die-hard India fans would have predicted that at the start of the day – but Australia’s middle order stuck to the original script. India’s middle order might have the tools to fix the situation but the mystery is whether they are sharp enough after one rained-out warm-up match to post a record winning score and stop Australia recording their 15th consecutive Test win.

Misbah, Watson and Ashraful to be auctioned

Misbah-ul-Haq was not in the fray during the first auction, but is a big draw © Getty Images
 

Pakistan’s Misbah-ul-Haq, Australia’s Shane Watson, and Mohammad Ashraful, the Bangladesh captain, are among 18 players included in the second Indian Premier League (IPL) auction to be held in Mumbai on March 11. The list is made up of seven New Zealanders, four Australians, three Pakistanis, two Bangladeshis, one Sri Lankan and South African each but no English cricketers.The injury-prone Watson has not played for Australia since the ICC World Twenty20 in September 2007 and he has struggled during Queensland’s Pura Cup campaign. He earned a recall to the national side for the CB Series but nagging leg problems forced him out again. Misbah, who was not included for the initial auction, is a big draw given his Twenty20 success in the last season.Mohammad Yousuf and Ashwell Prince, who failed to be picked up by any of the eight franchises last month, will be auctioned again.Western Australia’s Luke Pomersbach, who joins fellow Australians Watson, Brad Hodge and James Hopes in the second auction, said he was willing to play in the IPL for free. “I am pretty excited about it, because I did not think I would have a chance, but I have, and it will be a chance to play with some serious cricketers,” he told . “I would be happy to go over for free and play that standard of cricket and cricketers,” he said. “I will be able to learn so much from them, but I will take anything I can get.”A top BCCI official, on condition of anonymity, told IANS: “There are 13 other foreign players who have shown keen interest to play in the first season”. These include Shaun Tait, on a self-imposed indefinite break from cricket, Brad Hogg, who recently retired, West Indies’ Dwayne Smith, and Yasir Hameed, the Pakistan batsman. Seven other Australians have also apparently expressed interest.The IPL permits each franchise to buy more foreign players outside the list of 18 if they inform the tournament officials about who they are interested in. The IPL organisers would then negotiate the players’ base prices and try and secure No-Objection Certificates (NOCs) from the respective country boards.This auction is expected to be relatively smaller than the first, which was worth US$42 million. The eight franchise owners still have unspent money, a factor which has necessitated a second auction. The amounts are: $374,000 (Bangalore), $23,750 (Chennai), $71,250 (Delhi), $262,500 (Hyderabad), $1,700,000 (Jaipur), $107,500 (Kolkata), $292,250 (Mohali) and $53,750 (Mumbai).”If a team exceeds $5 million [after spending] on players who were initially not available but become available later, the excess expenditure will be ignored,” said the official. “Also, player fees for Indian players who were not in the auction do not count against the $5m purse. There will be no more auctions this season.”All team owners have to finalise their squads 30 days before the start of the 2008 season. The IPL kicks off on April 18.Players for second auction:
Pakistan: Mohammad Yousuf, Misbah-ul-Haq, Mohammad Hafeez; South Africa: Ashwell Prince; New Zealand: Ross Taylor, Peter Fulton, Jamie How, Jeetan Patel, Chris Martin, Kyle Mills, James Franklin; Australia: Brad Hodge, Shane Watson, James Hopes, Luke Pomersbach; Sri Lanka: Prasanna Jayawardene; Bangladesh: Mohammad Ashraful, Mashrafe Mortaza.Players who have expressed their interest:
Australia: Shaun Marsh, Brad Hogg, Shaun Tait, Adam Voges, Mick Lewis, Darren Lehmann, Allan Wise, Aiden Blizzard, Adam Crosthwaite; South Africa: Goolam Bodi; Pakistan: Yasir Hameed; West Indies: Kieran Powell, Dwayne Smith.

Now for real African Test

“It is one thing to be guiding the side to victory against an attack comprising the likes of Chigumbura, Brent, Utseya and Price. However to replicate that effort against Ntini, Pollock, Steyn and Nel will be deserving of region-wide rejoicing.” © Getty Images

At least there are no expectations to live up to.Having seen off the challenge of Zimbabwe after the stumbling in the opening match, no-one should be under any illusions as to the huge step-up in the standard of competition awaiting the West Indies on their arrival in South Africa today.Yesterday’s washout of the fifth and final one-day international in Bulawayo may have deprived the tourists of the chance to extend their ODI winning streak to four matches (the last time they enjoyed such a run of success was against India at home last year). But even the most emphatic of victories would surely not have deluded them as to the enormity of the challenge over the next eight weeks in a country that has been their most barren frontier.In four separate visits to the country at the very southern tip of the African continent, beginning with a triangular tournament in early 1993, the Caribbean cricketers have managed just a solitary victory over their hosts on each trip.On that first journey, Brian Lara’s unbeaten hundred saw Richie Richardson’s team to a nine-wicket victory after two earlier losses to Kepler Wessels’ side and confirmed a place in the final, where they cruised past Pakistan to continue their winning form from the triumphant tour of Australia.Doesn’t it seem like only yesterday that we were hailing the return of our conquering heroes who had rallied from losing the second match, winning the fourth (by one run) and fifth (by an innings) Tests to retain the Frank Worrell Trophy, having earlier defeated the Aussies to claim the tri-nation limited-over title? The subsequent success in South Africa was merely the icing on the cake, but it has proved to be the first and, so far, last time that the West Indies, as a team, lifted any sort of silverware there.

Forget about relatively plain sailing in Zimbabwe. Just staying afloat in South Africa will be a monumental task.

On the calamitous 1998/99 campaign, Lara’s side lost all five Tests and six of seven ODIs, the exception being the second fixture in East London where hundreds from Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Carl Hooper saw the visitors to what was then a series-levelling victory. If nothing else, the fact that the tour opens on Friday with a Twenty20 match against a Makhaya Ntini Invitational XI at the same Buffalo Park ground should give the former captain some happy memories.Ironically, the next journey to South Africa opened with a notable triumph, Lara unfurling another majestic hundred as the West Indies scrambled a three-run victory to stun the hosts in the first match of the 2003 World Cup in Cape Town. It all went downhill thereafter for the two-time former champions with Hooper, much to his chagrin, replaced as captain by Lara after the team failed to advance to the Super Six stage of the tournament.Just ten months later, the West Indies were back in town for a full tour , and while it was not as catastrophic and emotionally deflating as five years earlier, the tourists still only had one victory to show after losing the four-Test series 3-0 and then succumbing 3-1 in the limited-over contest.That one day of joy was in the penultimate match of the tour as Chanderpaul, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Lara led a run-feast in glorious afternoon sunshine at Centurion that saw the much-maligned tourists overhauling a target of 298 with five overs to spare, displaying an imperiousness that belied the overall results of yet another failed campaign in that part of the world.And just to rub salt and pepper into wide open wounds, the memories of losing to both the mighty South Africans (despite Gayle’s historic hundred) and the lightly-regarded Bangladeshis in Johannesburg on the way to being dumped out of the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup less than three months ago are still painfully fresh.So let’s not get carried away, either by sheer ignorance of those unavoidable realities or the supreme yet baseless optimism that this West Indian side is capable of doing what none of the earlier versions managed to achieve with much more experience and talent.Dwayne Bravo seems to be responding well to the responsibilities of leadership in Gayle’s enforced absence through injury, but he surely doesn’t need reminding that the geographical proximity of Zimbabwe to South Africa bears no relation to the world of difference between the two national teams.It is one thing to be guiding the side to victory against an attack comprising the likes of Chigumbura, Brent, Utseya and Price. However to replicate that effort against Ntini, Pollock, Steyn and Nel will be deserving of region-wide rejoicing.It’s not that it can’t be done. Why, just over a year ago another pulverising Gayle hundred led the West Indies to a rampaging victory over Graeme Smith’s side in the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy in India. But, as has become commonplace with almost everything associated with our cricket in more than a decade of struggle, maintaining a consistently high level of performance has proved frustratingly elusive.So now there’s a new captain (who is injured), a new deputy (who must expect to be thrown in at the deep end), a new coach (who was amazingly allowed to skip the Zimbabwean leg of the tour), a returning manager (Clive Lloyd was in that role in ’98/99) and just two survivors from the last time we defeated South Africa in their own backyard (Gayle and Chanderpaul).Forget about relatively plain sailing in Zimbabwe. Just staying afloat in South Africa will be a monumental task.