Jamaica Gleaner

Simmons unfazed by Windies T20 rankings slide

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PORT OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD (CMC):

WEST INDIES’ slump in the world Twenty20 rankings is of little concern to head coach Phil Simmons, but he believes it can work to his side’s advantage if the T20 World Cup comes off in Australia this October.

Since winning the T20 World Cup under Simmons four years ago in India, the Caribbean side have slid down the rankings and now lie ninth only above minnows Afghanista­n, Zimbabwe and Ireland.

In fact, the Windies have won just 15 of their 46 T20 internatio­nals since the 2016 World Cup in India.

“In a way it’s nice [to be so low in the rankings], you might get a few of the big teams taking their eyes off us, and they all know that’s a dangerous thing to do,” Simmons said.

“I don’t think the ranking means anything at the end of the day. I think our squad showed what it can do in those T20s in Sri Lanka [last March] and it’s a case where it was a squad that was just getting together, and you could add the fact it was a squad without Evin Lewis.

“We know each other’s game in this format, and I think the time period we’ll have we’ll make the best use of it to get ourselves ready, and I hope some of the bigger teams take us for granted as we won’t have much work under our belts.

“But I don’t think they will; they know what we’re capable of.”

As it stands, however, doubt surrounds the T20 World Cup due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has halted cricket across the globe.

The tournament is scheduled for October 18 to November 15, but the Internatio­nal Cricket Council is yet to make a decision on whether to postpone the showpiece.

And while conceding that the lockdown in the Caribbean because of the virus would hurt the side’s preparatio­n, Simmons pointed out the experience in the squad would prove the ideal buffer.

“I think the only disadvanta­ge it (lockdown) places on West Indies is how much work the guys are able to do before we go there (World Cup) – if it’s happening,” the Trinidadia­n explained.

“I think once we get there, T20 is the one format where the squad that we have would be able to get themselves in that position where we will be able to play to our standards in a shorter space of time than maybe the Test players would.

“I think the squad for the T20s is more seasoned than the younger squad in Test cricket.”

The lockdown across the Caribbean has put in danger several internatio­nal tours, especially with South Africa and New Zealand expected to arrive in the Caribbean for multi-format series in July and August. The South Africa tour is of special significan­ce to West Indies’ T20 World Cup preparatio­n, with five T20 internatio­nals scheduled at the back end of the series in August. Critically, the Caribbean Premier League, scheduled to start in August, is also under the microscope, though organisers have pushed ahead with planning.

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West Indies T20 captain Kieron Pollard.
AP SIMMONS West Indies T20 captain Kieron Pollard.
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