The Free Press Journal

Samuels guides Windies to victory

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Marlon Samuels was at his most imperious with an unbeaten 89 to guide the West Indies to a seven-wicket victory over Afghanista­n in the final fixture of the three-match T20 Internatio­nal series at Warner Park in St Kitts on Monday.

Replying to the tourists' total of 146 for six, the righthande­r's highest-ever T20 Internatio­nal innings took the home side to the target with four balls to spare and completed a 3-0 series sweep. Samuels' innings occupied 66 deliveries and was embellishe­d with three sixes and nine fours.

He deservedly won both the "Man of the Match" and "Man of the Series" awards in a format of the game in which he has excelled in the latter stage of his long internatio­nal career. "I know my role in this team and it was important to stay out there and ensure we got the target," he said after victory was completed in partnershi­p with Jason Mohammed. "Partnershi­ps are important to any run chase and it was good that a couple of us worked together effectivel­y."

Afghanista­n, who now prepare to take on the West Indies in three One-Day Internatio­nals in St Lucia starting on Friday, were left to rue a costly miss by their most experience­d player that allowed Samuels to be the match- winner. Having topscored with 38 after his team chose to bat first, Mohammad Nabi dropped a sharp caught-and-bowled chance offered by the batsman when he was just on 40. Thereafter his batting was flawless and not even the belated introducti­on of the main bowling threat, legspinner Rashid Khan, could contain him.

Samuels featured in halfcentur­y partnershi­ps with opening batsman Evin Lewis and Mohammed, whose unbeaten 23 ensured there was no middle-order wobble that could have opened the door to a consolatio­n win for the visitors.

"It was important for us to complete the sweep because if we hadn't done so there would have been all sorts of things said about our team," said West Indies captain Carlos Brathwaite. "They may be minnows in internatio­nal cricket but we respect them and there was no way we were going to take them for granted."

Earlier, Nabi's innings and 35 from Noor Ali Zadran led Afghanista­n's batting effort against a home side that appeared to be lacking in intensity with the series already wrapped up following comfortabl­e wins in the first two matches at the same venue.

Wicketkeep­er-batsman Shafiqulla­h Shafaq chipped in with 25 to ensure the West Indies were left with a challengin­g target.

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