Jamaica Gleaner

Australian Smith backs Tridents to deliver

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FORMER AUSTRALIA Test captain Steve Smith has backed Barbados Tridents to break their threeyear title drought and win this year’s Caribbean Premier League.

The 29-year-old, currently serving a one-year ban from internatio­nal and Australian domestic cricket, is part of the Tridents squad who open their campaign in the popular T20 tournament in Georgetown today against Guyana Amazon Warriors.

“I don’t see any reason why the Tridents can’t go the whole way. It’s a good side. It’s got a good balance of players, some seriously talented players – overseas and West Indians – so it’s a good squad and, hopefully, we can go the full distance this year,” Smith said.

“I’m looking forward to playing in my first CPL. I had a great training session with the boys on Tuesday and got to meet a few of them. It’s a good bunch of guys, so I’m looking forward to this tournament and, hopefully, I’ll be able to make a good impact on the Tridents.”

FRANCHISE REVAMP

Tridents last won the tournament in 2014 but have struggled in recent seasons, leading to a revamp of the franchise.

Kieron Pollard, who led them for five years, has moved on to St Lucia stars, and West Indies Test and one-day captain Jason Holder has taken over the captaincy.

Holder is one of nine Barbadians in the line-up, with the likes of Test stars Roston Chase and Shai Hope also included, along with veteran T20 star Dwayne Smith.

Australian Smith headlines four overseas players in the squad, joining South Africa’s Hashim Amla, New Zealander Martin Guptill, and Pakistan’s Mohammed Irfan, and said that he believed that they could play a key role in the Tridents’ success.

“I’m looking forward to playing with Hashim. I’ve played against him a lot and he’s a class player. I’m looking forward to seeing how he goes about his business,” Smith said.

Smith has dominated the Test arena in recent years and holds the highest average of any modern-day batsman with 61.37. He has also amassed 6,199 runs from just 64 matches, with 23 hundreds.

He has also adapted well to the shortest format, already with a hundred under his belt, and said success in T20s did not call for a massive adjustment.

“I don’t change my game a great deal between formats, probably just turning different gears,” he pointed out.

The sixth edition of the CPL started last Wednesday and runs until September 16.

 ??  ?? Australia’s Steve Smith
Australia’s Steve Smith

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