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West Indies

A selection of the latest West Indies on the interweb

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Tuesday, August 05, 2008


Get us a beer i'm parched...

With the rampant march of Twenty20 upon the throne of cricket, Test matches are taking on a whole new complexion, with run rates rising and batsmen appearing to have turned into whirling dervishes.

Thing is though, there was a time when carrying your bat and grinding out an innings was valued above all else

Timekeepers (over 600 minutes) since the introduction of Twenty20 cricket


Wednesday, July 30, 2008


Chris Gayle: 'How big is it?'

Chris Gayle’s decision to resign as West Indies captain has reiterated the discontent and stresses of selection.

Gayle publicly voiced his strife with the West Indian Cricket Board’s approach to the one-day series against Australia in addition to his lack of control behind the scenes.

Similarly, Michael Vaughan pointed the finger at Geoff Miller & Co over the late inclusion of unknown seamer Darren Pattinson for England’s 10-wicket Headingley thrashing, going as far as saying the Nottinghamshire paceman had affected the unity of the team.

Since then, England have been criticised for being a closed shop. It is an entirely different situation to the sunnier climates of the Caribbean with Gayle rightly embarrassed by the experimental nature of the Australia 5-0 series whitewash.

Previously in Test cricket, the six batsman, wicket-keeper, three-seamers and a spinner format was nailed in stone. Nowadays, the chopping and changing illustrates how England and the West Indies are being driven without a route to victory.

England may well lose their second successive major home series and with the Australians over next year, a hat-trick of defeats would put England back to square one.

Consistency in selection is undoubtedly the chief priority, but only to the benefit of the side. Whereas England are sticking to tradition and keeping with the tried and trusted (whatever the format), Allen Stanford’s cash windfall has taken the West Indian eye clearly off the red-ball.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008


"Brilliant, I can go out in Heathfield..."

After an injury to Mushtaq Ahmed, and mindful that Luke Wright will be off with England, for most of the summer, Sussex have signed the West Indies allrounder, Dwayne Smith, to play in the domestic Twenty20 competition. Though his batting average of 9.75 makes you wonder if D'uane Ladejo might have been a better bet, his strike rate of 128.3 hints at what might lie ahead, and he is renowned for his intelligent bowling that has given him an average of 15. "I think it's an exciting signing," said skipper Chris Adams, "I haven't a great knowledge of Dwayne but he is a great fielder, hits the ball a very long way and is an improving bowler."

Well Chris, let us be of help, click here to see Dwayne in action.

Sunday, May 11, 2008


Windies take their ex captain's trophy for first time

On this day in 1965 the West Indies won the Frank Worrell Trophy after beating Australia at home. It was the first time they won the trophy named after their former captain, winning two tests, losing one and tying the other two tests in the series. West Indies went on the dominate the trophy, holding it between 1978 and 1992, only losing six out of the 40 tests played. The form couldn’t last though and the West Indies have lost every Frank Worrell Trophy series since.

Elsewhere, in 1998 India added their name to list of countries in the arms race by announcing that they carried out ‘contained’ nuclear explosions causing yet more friction between them and neighbouring Pakistan. This increased the diplomatic pressure on Pakistan to show restraint and not retaliate but they couldn’t and tested their own a week later causing worldwide controversy.

Also, today in 1956 the Gold Coast, which contained the countries Ashanti, Northern Territories and Togoland, became the first black African county to be granted independence from Britain. They renamed themselves Ghana after an ancient West African Kingdom and, although not without controversy, produced players like Michael Essien and Sulley Muntari.

It’s Irving Howard Romaine as they say in Bermuda! to dependable Austalian opener Ian Redpath (67), Barcelona marvels Giovanni Dos Santos (19) and Andres Iniesta (24), Arsenal non-passer Abou Diaby (22), not-getting-past-the-first-round snooker player John Parrott and the very fit Holly Valance (25).

Friday, May 02, 2008



Today is a day for greatness. The Rock was born. Oh, and a Brian Charles Lara arrived too. Brian being one of the greatest batsmen that ever lived of course. He currently holds the record for the highest individual Test innings score, 400 not out against, who else, England in 2004, and the record score in first-class cricket, with 501 not out for Warwickshire against Durham in 1994. Conclusion: He wasn’t a bad little player...

Elsewhere today, Pakistan’s Inzamam Ul-Haq scored 329 for Pakistan against New Zealand in 2002. Outside of cricket, history was made in 1968 when Spain’s General Franco ordered the closing of the frontier between his country and Gibraltar, while a year later, the QE II made her maiden voyage from Southampton over the Atlantic. One cruiser that was making it’s last journey today, was the Argentinean Belgrano, which was sunk today in the South Atlantic in 1982 during the Falkland War.

And in 1965, the British-owned Early Bird satellite began transmitting TV programmes to more than 300 million viewers. The first programme Out of this World, sounds awesome. Sadly though, we missed it. We also missed any sign of the Loch Ness Monster, unlike the Scottish folk in 1933, when some London newspapers sent correspondents to the lake after reported sightings.

And it’s Mudhsuden Singh Panesar! as they say in England to former Sri Lankan pace bowler and opening batsman Ravi Ratnayeke (48), little known non-league footballer David Beckham (33), former cool wrestler and now uber-uncool actor The Rock (36), snooker ledge Jimmy White (46) and the man with a League of Gentleman nose, David O’Leary (50).

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