VADODARA, MARCH 16: Let bygones be bygones, said Indian skipper Saurav Ganguly. The captain is ready to bury the memories of his debatable dismissal in the last game which his team lost by two wickets. After the “I was not out” statement at Faridabad, Ganguly made up with “it happens everywhere” at Vadodara.
The just included players — Javagal Srinath and Saba Karim — are almost certain to be in the eleven according to Ganguly. But the skipper was non-committal about the options if he wins the toss. “We will decide after seeing the wicket in the morning,” he
Meanwhile, South African captain Hansie Cronje, who is just a match away from losing the series, was hoping the recently availed winning feeling becomes a habit.
Cronje said the team was missing key players Allan Donald and Jonty Rhodes. “We are trying to build a new team but it is not easy to fill that vacuum,” the captain said.
About the fitness of the players, he said Lance Klusener was fit but the team was worried about the fitness of Henry Williams and Nantie Hayward.
No women, please
FARIDABAD: Men only, women not allowed. Hansie Cronje might as well wear that on his T-shirt the next time around.
There was no place for women scribes, who like their male counterparts, were waiting for a comment from the winning South African skipper, who chose to hold the post-match press conference in the dressing room instead of a common area on Wednesday. The normally courteous Cronje stopped the women in their track with a curt, “No ladies allowed.”
The South African dressing room was out of bounds — though some male reporters did manage to squeeze in. It opened just once and spinner Nicky Boje, who peeped out, promised to request Cronje to “come out and speak” to the media. Boje’s entreaties clearly did not work, for even when the door opened again, there was no sign of Cronje.
In the end, it was left to some male reporters to go inside, get the required quotes and avert any controversy.
Still, what Cronje did was neither cricket. Nor nice.