Cricket
-> Specials
-> World Cup 2003
-> News
-> Report
World Cup ‘table’ turn turtle for Kenya and West Indies
Monday, March 3 2003 04:51 Hrs (IST)
Kimberley: Kenya and the West Indies play their final World Cup league match on
Tuesday with the result having no significance in the race for the Super Sixes.
That is how it was supposed to be in the group ‘B’ calculations, except that it is
Kenya who have qualified for the next round while West Indies goes through the
motions before packing its bags.
The only hope for Carl Hooper's West Indians, whose predecessors won the first two
editions of cricket's showpiece in 1975 and 1979, is if Canada upset New Zealand and
South Africa lose to Sri Lanka on Monday.
It's a remote possibility that even Hooper doubts will happen.
"Cricket's a funny game, anything can happen, but really we know we are out of it,"
Hooper said.
"It will be hard to motivate the boys. But we will still try and win. It's still a
One-day International and more importantly, it is a World Cup game."
Also, the West Indies would not want to suffer the embarrassment which Richie
Richardson's men went through in the 1996 World Cup when they lost to Kenya at Pune,
India.
The West Indies has slipped badly after a fine start in which it upset hosts South
Africa under the Newlands lights at Cape Town in the opening match of the tournament
on February 9.
But it won just one of its next four games, against Canada, and were further
handicapped when bad weather denied them a certain win against Bangladesh.
The loss of those two points left it languishing at 10 points, two behind South
Africa and New Zealand and six points adrift of Sri Lanka and Kenya.
The Kenyans, on the other hand, are flying high after becoming the first non-Test
playing nation to qualify for the Super Sixes.
They deserved the spot after a shock win over Sri Lanka although their campaign was
helped by New Zealand's boycott of the Nairobi game on February 21, which gave Steve
Tikolo's team four easy points.
Tikolo hoped Kenya's performance in the World Cup will strengthen its case to be
granted Test status by the International Cricket Council (ICC).
"The ICC should take notice," Tikolo said.
"Our performances here have shown that we are worth more international matches and
they will definitely be a boost for Kenyan cricket - as you can see from our shirts,
we don't even have a sponsor."
Copyright AFP 2001
Extras:
|