Howa Bowl

{{Short description|Cricket competition}}

{{morefootnotes|date=October 2023}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2023}}

{{Use South African English|date=September 2023}}

{{Infobox cricket tournament main

| tournament name = Howa Bowl

| image =

| size =

| caption =

| administrator = South African Cricket Board

| cricket format = First Class (3 day)

| first = 1972/73

| last = 1990/91

| tournament format = Round-robin

| participants = 4

| most successful = Western Province (14)

| most runs = Yacoob Omar (3377)

| most wickets = Vincent Barnes (304)

}}

The Howa Bowl was a first-class cricket competition in South Africa that ran from the 1972–73 to 1990–91 cricket seasons. Originally known as the Dadabhay Trophy, it was contested between Eastern Province, Natal, Transvaal, and Western Province.

The Howa Bowl was run during South Africa's exclusion from international cricket due to apartheid. It was limited to non-white players, who were not permitted to compete in the Currie Cup. It was organised by the South African Cricket Board, with the matches being played over three days. The pitches used in the competition were of poor quality, which is highlighted by the fact that a team made 400 or more in an innings just six times while being bowled out for under 100 on 87 occasions.{{cite web|url=http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/wisdenalmanack/content/story/251213.html|title=Setting the records straight| publisher=Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2006}}

In 1991, the fall of apartheid saw South Africa's sporting isolation ended and led to the formation of the United Cricket Board (UCB). Consequently, the racial divisions in the nation's domestic cricket were abolished after 102 years: with this, the raison d'etre for the Howa Bowl ceased to exist, and the competition was ended.

First-class status

Although the 216 Howa Bowl matches had not been given first-class status when the competition ended, the UCB subsequently requested that these be added retrospectively. In 2006, Wisden added these matches to the official records and seven other representative matches between non-white teams.

This decision meant that West Indian Test cricketer Rohan Kanhai, who had played in the competition's 1974/75 season with success, moved past Plum Warner on the list of all-time leading first-class run scorers, and also joined his former teammate Gary Sobers with 86 career centuries.{{cite web|url=https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Records/Firstclass/Overall/index.html|title=Overall First-Class Records|publisher=CricketArchive|access-date=2017-10-27|archive-date=2016-03-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303193928/http://www.cricketarchive.com/Archive/Records/Firstclass/Overall/index.html|url-status=dead}}

Further to this, two more instances of the rare dismissal handled the ball was added to the records, along with the first-ever case of a batter being given out timed out: Andrew Jordaan, playing for Eastern Province v Transvaal at Port Elizabeth in 1987–88 – he had been not out overnight, but arrived late the following day due to the roads being poor after torrential rain.

Champions by season

The Howa Bowl was dominated by Western Province, who won fourteen of the 19 titles outright (one was shared with Natal, which was Natal's only title), while Eastern Province won three and Transvaal won one.{{Cite web |title=Howa Bowl 1983/84 Schedule {{!}} Howa Bowl Fixtures & Results |url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/howa-bowl-1983-84-265758/match-schedule-fixtures-and-results |access-date=2024-04-24 |website=ESPNcricinfo |language=en}}

class="wikitable"
TournamentWinnerLeading run-scorerLeading wicket-taker
| 1972/73Western Province
Natal
Sedick Conrad (447)Ismail Ebrahim (33)
| 1973/74Western ProvinceMoosa Mangera (360)Keith Barker (26)
| 1974/75TransvaalRohan Kanhai (460)Saait Magiet (28)
| 1975/76Western ProvinceYacoob Omar (435)Howard Bergins (30)
| 1976/77colspan=3| No competition
| 1977/78Western ProvinceYacoob Omar (498)Armien Jabaar (24)
| 1978/79Eastern ProvinceYacoob Omar (381)Rushdi Magiet (27)
| 1979/80Western ProvinceGraham Francois (317)Lefty Adams (40)
| 1980/81Western ProvinceRashaad Musson (467)E Frans (39)
| 1981/82Western ProvinceNeil Fortune (448)Mustapha Khan (39)
| 1982/83Western ProvinceMansoor Abdullah (270)Vincent Barnes (41)
| 1983/84Western ProvinceN Edwards (338)Armien Jabaar (30)
| 1984/85Eastern ProvinceGarth Cuddumbey (313)Stephen Draai (32)
| 1985/86Eastern ProvinceHaroon Lorgat (417)Vincent Barnes (36)
T le Roux (36)
Jack Manack (36)
| 1986/87Western ProvinceSaait Magiet (335)Vincent Barnes (42)
| 1987/88Western ProvinceFaiek Davids (429)Jack Manack (28)
| 1988/89Western ProvinceFaiek Davids (436)Jack Manack (26)
| 1989/90Western ProvinceAndre Peters (363)Jack Manack (27)
| 1990/91Western ProvinceNazeem White (407)Jack Manack (31)

Statistical leaders

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+ Batsmen{{cite book |chapter=Setting the records straight |last1=Engel |first1=Matthew |last2=Samson |author1-link=Matthew Engel |author2-link=Andrew Samson |first2=Andrew |pages=79–80 |editor-last=Engel |editor-first=Matthew |title=Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2006 |edition=143 |year=2006 |publisher=John Wisden & Co |location=Alton, Hampshire |isbn=0-947766-98-7}}

scope="col" | Player

! scope="col" | Runs

! scope="col" | Average

scope="row" | Yacoob Omar

| 3,337

34.81
scope="row" | Khaya Majola

| 2,826

20.77
scope="row" | Saait Magiet

| 2,650

29.12
scope="row" | Mansoor Abdullah

| 2,294

28.67
scope="row" | Haroon Lorgat

| 2,183

24.67

class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+ Bowlers

scope="col" | Player

! scope="col" | Wickets

! scope="col" | Average

scope="row" | Vincent Barnes

| 304

11.12
scope="row" | Seraj Gabriels

| 254

15.07
scope="row" | Mustapha Khan

| 248

19.26
scope="row" | Armien Jabaar

| 233

13.39
scope="row" | Khaya Majola

| 219

16.64

References

{{reflist}}

{{Cricket in South Africa |state=collapsed}}

Category:South African domestic cricket competitions

Category:Cricket and apartheid