The Borneo Post

West Indies face tall order against Australia

- — AFP

PERTH, Australia: A young West Indies side head into the first Test at Perth this week without a win on Australian soil for 25 years, but Pat Cummins’ number one-ranked team insist they will not take the tourists lightly.

The Caribbean side won by 10 wickets in 1997 on the back of a magnificen­t century from Brian Lara, coincident­ally in Perth, but have not won a Test in Australia since.

Lara will be back this week as a commentato­r and he called on the West Indies to put up a fight.

“I am not going to say that if we play at our best, we can beat Australia, but I want us to show resilience,” Lara told the Herald Sun newspaper ahead of the two-match series, which moves to Adelaide next week for a daynight Test.

“Get the games going five days. You never know. I have in the back of my mind the thought that these youngsters are up for a fight.”

Skipper Kraigg Brathwaite said they were not focusing on past results.

“Obviously, past history shows it’s a long time since getting wins in Australia and stuff, but we are focusing on our own goals,” he said.

“What is the big focus is that we have 10 days of Test cricket, and we want to be playing a good, solid 10 days of Test cricket.

“We just want to make people in the Caribbean proud.”

Brathwaite is set for a new opening partner for the clash starting Wednesday in exciting left-hander Tagenarine Chanderpau­l, the son of retired batting great Shivnarine.

He was handed a maiden call-up to the squad after John Campbell, who opened with Brathwaite against Bangladesh in June, was slapped with a fouryear ban for violation of an antidoping rule.

Chanderpau­l showed his mettle in a warm-up game against a Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra, hitting 119 and 56.

Alzarri Joseph, Kemar Roach, Jayden Seales and the experience­d Jason Holder spearhead a dangerous pace attack, with Lara pointing to Joseph as a key threat.

“I believe Joseph is going to be special, and Australia is going to know a lot more about him by the end of the series,” he said of the 26-year-old.

Despite their poor record in Australia, the West Indies will take confidence from winning both Test series they have played this year – against England and Bangladesh at home.

But they will have to be at their best to upset Australia’s starstudde­d side, who top the Test rankings ahead of India, with the West Indies only eighth.

A key threat could come from Steve Smith, who has reverted to a more orthodox batting style which saw him score 94 and an unbeaten 80 in Australia’s recent one-day series against England.

Former captain Greg Chappell predicted at the weekend that Smith would “make a mountain of runs this summer”.

Brathwaite and his team will also need to tame one of the most potent pace attacks in the world, led by Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc, and also deal with the spin of Nathan Lyon.

Starc is just 13 wickets away from the 300-mark with pacefriend­ly conditions in Perth set to assist the left-armer.

He is looking forward to “a good contest between bat and ball”, and said the West Indies should not be underestim­ated, pointing to their home Test triumph over England in March.

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? (From left) Kemar Roach, Kraigg Brathwaite and Shimron Hetmyer of West Indies celebrate the dismissal of Moeen Ali of England during day 2 of the 1st Test between West Indies and England at Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados.
— AFP file photo (From left) Kemar Roach, Kraigg Brathwaite and Shimron Hetmyer of West Indies celebrate the dismissal of Moeen Ali of England during day 2 of the 1st Test between West Indies and England at Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados.

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