KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – Guyana Harpy Eagles captain Tevin Imlach hailed his side’s character after they bounced back from a dodgy start to complete a crushing 212-run victory over Jamaica Scorpions last weekend.
Sent in at Sabina Park in the sixth round of the West Indies Championship, Harpy Eagles found themselves tottering on 61 for six just after lunch on the opening day before recovering superbly to post 424.
They took a stranglehold on the game by bundling the hosts out for 153 before racking up their fourth win on the trot.
“Having been 60 for six and to come back and score 400 runs shows a lot of character from the team. We bat very deep,” the Observer newspaper quoted Imlach as saying.
“The bowlers’ performance was clinical. I always said if we got one or two wickets early [on Saturday], it would be a different game, so credit to the bowlers because they were very disciplined again in this game.
“We all believed that once we do what we do well – which is to stay disciplined and be consistent – we’d do well against any team. It [finished] much earlier than we expected, but we were confident we would have done it.”
Imlach helped lead the first innings recovery by carving out an unbeaten 101 to post his third first-class hundred. He retired hurt on one early in the morning session of the opening day but returned to feature in a 154-run, eighth-wicket stand with wicketkeeper Kemol Savory, who carved out a brilliant 155.
Veteran left-arm spinner Verasammy Permaul weighed in with a five-wicket haul to hurt Scorpions. Harpy Eagles quickly rattled up 147 for four declared in their second innings, leaving their opponents with a 419 as a victory target.
While Scorpions ended day three on 123 for two, they collapsed quickly on last Saturday’s final day and lost heavily.
Captain Brandon King, the West Indies white-ball batsman, described his side’s performance as “unacceptable.” He cited especially the effort in the field that allowed Harpy Eagles to recover so well on the opening day.
“I am very disappointed, especially [because of] the position that we were in in the first innings,” he said.
“Having them 60 for six and for them to make 424 is unacceptable in any cricket. It put us on the back foot early in the game.
“We need improvement in all aspects. We dropped about seven catches in the first innings, so that’s very important [because] it gave them that big total.
“In both innings, we didn’t bat well, [even though] it seems a good batting pitch, in my opinion. We definitely should have made more runs in both innings. With those two major things, you will lose games.”