/ 16 January 2010

Zimbabwe gets serious about return to Test cricket

After seven years in the cricket wilderness, Zimbabwe is at last showing real potential for a possible return to full Test status.

A new league structure of regional first class matches, funded jointly by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and local sponsors, is energising the game here.

Players are being paid US dollar match fees, win bonuses and awards for centuries or five-wicket hauls.

Under a team of full-time coaches headed by David Houghton and former national captain Heath Streak, about 80 young and experienced players have shown such progress over the last three months that convener of national selectors Alistair Campbell predicts Zimbabwe will be playing Tests in two years. Houghton believes it might only be one year.

Cricket in Zimbabwe was getting nowhere after being forced out of Tests following a series of embarrassingly bad results.

Sri Lanka, New Zealand and England were the main instigators by declining to meet future commitments.

But instead of rebuilding a first class domestic league and concentrating on three- or four-day matches, they almost exclusively played the quick-fire versions.

All that changed with an exploratory visit to Zimbabwe last year by former West Indies captain Conrad Hunte at the head of an ICC delegation. Hunte hatched a plan designed to springboard Zimbabwe’s return to Tests.

His idea was for franchised teams to be established in five main regions with local characteristics and names such as the Mountaineers (Eastern Districts), Southern Rocks (Bulawayo) and Mashonaland Eagles (Harare) so as to foster healthy rivalry within a first-class professional league structure.

It began with the new 2009-10 season in September.

Kenyon Ziehl, who runs the Midlands team, said: “Our league is fully professional on player salaries, each regional franchise having a chief executive, general manager, enthusiastic committee and proper accounting.

“Because of this set-up our national squad will consequently get better and better and there are early signs of this.”

As it happens, Zimbabwe remains on the official ICC “forward programme” of Tests with series scheduled this year against the West Indies, Australia and England. These won’t happen, but the fixtures have not been removed.

According to Houghton, a former senior Zimbabwe batsman (he once scored 266 runs against Sri Lanka), “Once we get the fast bowling sorted out by Heath Streak as national bowling coach — it is presently not up to strength — I reckon we will be ready.”

Houghton has been working with national coaching director Andy Waller, a former Test all-rounder, and other coaches.

The new Zimbabwe league has already attracted several former Test players, such as Dion Ebrahim, Hamilton Masakadza (a recent double century), Vusi Sibanda (averaging 100 in the league), Tatenda Taibu and John Rennie.

There are also efforts being made to secure the return, in the England off-season, of Sean Ervine (Hampshire) and Murray Goodwin (Sussex), the latter in recent years being consistently at or near the top of the English County Cricket batting averages.

In addition, Ray Price, Greg Lamb (Northants), Rickey Wessels (son of former South Africa captain Kepler), Graeme Cremer, Gavin Ewing, Elton Chigumbura, present captain Prosper Utseya and Charles Coventry (197 runs in a recent ODI) form the basis of a national squad.

They will be off to the West Indies next month for ODI’s and Twenty-20s.

Ziehl foresees a series of four-day matches being arranged “before very long” against Test nation sides so as to provide further experience and incentive.

Good results from such matches will be critical if they are they to presage a formal application by Zimbabwe Cricket to the ICC for a new and rejuvenated Zimbabwe to resume its place as a Test cricket nation. – AFP