Underdogs Windies seek end to home drought

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West Indies once again find themselves in the unenviable position of hoping to make a fresh start, when they clash with Pakistan in the opening One-Day International of the three-match series here Friday.

The hosts were completely outplayed in the four-match Twenty20 series over the last two weeks, culminating in a 3-1 defeat and the squandering of precious momentum ahead of the one-day series here at the Guyana National Stadium.

Despite the run of poor form, however, captain Jason Holder said his side remained buoyant and were focussed on drawing first blood.

“The mood in the camp is very good. I think everybody is positive going into this series,” the all-rounder told media here Thursday.

“There’s no point dwelling on the past. We obviously have to learn from the past but it’s a fresh series and we’ve got something to look forward to here in Guyana.

“Guyanese people always come out and watch cricket and they are avid cricket fans so it would be good to start the series well here in Guyana and give them something to shout about.”

Pakistan will start as favourites especially based on recent and past history. Last October, they trounced the Caribbean side in a three-match series in the United Arab Emirates.

In fact, West Indies have not beaten Pakistan in a bilateral series in 26 years, and have lost nine of the last 13 ODIs against the Asian side in the Caribbean.

Holder was quick to acknowledge the Windies’ status as underdogs in the series but said it could also work in their favour.

“Pakistan are ranked higher than us and they’ve obviously beaten us in the last series we played in the UAE,” Holder pointed out.

“They’ve started this tour well. I believe we’re probably the underdogs right now. It’s not a bad tag to have, the expectation is pretty much on Pakistan to beat us and that’s incentive for our guys. We must go and show them that we can beat Pakistan.

“They are just one step ahead of us in the ICC rankings and I don’t think they are impossible to beat. We’ve shown we can beat them here in the T20 series so far, we’ve played some pretty good cricket in the T20 series but we haven’t seized crucial moments.”

As usual, the Windies batting will come firmly under the microscope, especially after its massive failings in the 3-0 whitewash to England last month and in the just concluded T20 series against Pakistan.

 

More in today’s Daily Observer

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