Gulf Today

West Indies upbeat ahead of Test series against Australia

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sydney: The West Indies have had litle success in the shortest form of cricket lately but veteran Jason Holder says that won’t diminish the Test team’s ambitions for the two-match series against Australia beginning on Wednesday.

The Caribbean side lost in the preliminar­y stage of the Twenty20 World Cup in late October in Australia, beaten by both Ireland and Scotland. Those losses meant the team which won the T20 World Cup in 2012 and 2016 didn’t qualify for the main tournament.

Coach Phil Simmons has quit and the two Tests in Australia -- the second a day-night match beginning Dec. 8 in Adelaide -- will be his last in charge.

Holder says the Test team is going in the opposite direction -- unbeaten this year with series wins at home against Bangladesh and England.

“If you look at the nucleus of this Test team it’s been together for the last five or six years, which is really important,” Holder told Australian Associated Press from Perth, Western Australia, site of the first test. “In comparison to the other (West Indies) sides, there is probably a litle bit more chopping and changing.

“Our focus right now is test cricket. We put the Twenty20 World Cup behind us and we are just try to focus on that.”

Five players are in the test squad that played on the T20 team, including fast bowler Alzarri Joseph.

As a 19-year-old, Joseph impressed Australian players during a 2016 net session in the Caribbean. Joseph will be making his first test appearance in Australia - the Caribbean side hasn’t play for the Frank Worrell Trophy for seven years Down Under.

“We saw him just bowling thunderbol­ts,” Australia opener David Warner said of the 2016 net session. “On those wickets . . . it was a bit daunting. We just didn’t know where he’d come from.”

Joseph debuted for the West Indies two months later and has since taken 62 wickets in 22 tests.

“He was young back then. It’s good to see him evolve from then,” Warner told AAP. “He’s a fantastic bowler, he’s got a good record. I faced him in the IPL when he first came in and took (six wickets) against us.

“That’s what West Indies cricket needs, they need guys coming in bowling at high speeds . . . back to what they were in the ’80s and ’90s.”

Both the new stadium in Perth and the Adelaide Oval are expected to favor fast bowlers.

Holder confirmed that Tagenarine Chanderpau­l, son of West Indies legend Shivnarine, would debut for the visitors.

West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite is in the unique position of having bated alongside Shivnarine in the final years of the West Indian champion’s career and will now open with Tagenarine on debut.

 ?? Courtesy: WICB Twitter ?? ↑ Tagenarine Chanderpau­l poses with Brian Lara (left) during a training session.
Courtesy: WICB Twitter ↑ Tagenarine Chanderpau­l poses with Brian Lara (left) during a training session.

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