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Tag: West Indies

T20 World Cup 2026: Five Strategies that Can Help West Indies Win the Present T20 World Cup

Posted on February 19, 2026June 29, 2026 by Harold Gittens

For a proud cricketing nation like the West Indies — and especially from a Caribbean perspective— the mission is clear: reclaim global white-ball dominance. Here are five practical, high-impact strategies that I am sure Darren Sammy and his team may have thought about. Application of these strategies could help the West Indies win the T20 World Cup 2026.


1️⃣ Build Around Power + Matchups (Smart Aggression)

The modern T20 game is about controlled explosiveness.

With players like Shai Hope, Rovman Powell, Shurfane Rutherford and Shimron Hetmyer, the West Indies must:

  • Attack the Powerplay without reckless collapse
  • Use left-right combinations to disrupt bowling plans
  • Target specific bowlers instead of blind hitting

Key idea: Data-driven matchups — don’t just send hitters, send the right hitter at the right time.


2️⃣Redefine the Bowling Strategy

Past West Indies dominance was built on fearsome bowling. In T20s, it must be built on variations and discipline.

Core assets:

  • Shamar Joseph – pace and bounce
  • Akeal Hosein – Powerplay control
  • Holder – experience + death overs
  • G Motie – Control spin bowling at the correct time
  • Ramario Shepherd– Changing it up
  • Rolston Chase – Middle overs spin control

Winning formula:

  • Two specialist death bowlers
  • Spin operating in middle overs to choke scoring
  • Heavy use of slower balls and wide Yorkers

Goal: Defend 160 consistently. Win low-scoring matches.


3️⃣ Fix the Death Overs (Both Bat & Ball)

Recent tournaments have exposed one recurring weakness: finishing games.

With the bat:

  • Designate two fixed finishers
  • Practice 18th–20th over simulations under pressure
  • Encourage smart strike rotation before last over

With the ball:

  • Pre-plan overs 17–20 before the innings begins
  • Bowl to fields, not just lengths
  • Take the catches, no matter how difficult

Championship teams win the final four overs.


4️⃣ Select for Role Clarity, Not Reputation

Past T20 World Cup triumphs (2012, 2016) succeeded because roles were crystal clear.

The blueprint:

  • One anchor (if conditions demand)
  • Two Powerplay aggressors
  • Two middle-over enforcers
  • Two death specialists

Avoid:

  • Picking big names without defined jobs
  • Constant XI changes

Consistency builds tournament momentum.


5️⃣ Caribbean Mindset: Play Fearless, Not Emotional

West Indies cricket thrives on rhythm and confidence.

The leadership group must:

  • Keep dressing room energy positive
  • Block outside noise
  • Encourage expressive cricket

If someone like Hetmyer or Powell hits form early, the entire side lifts.

Remember:
When West Indies play free, they become the most dangerous white-ball side in the world.

The above strategies are not new but why re-invent the wheel, as they say there is nothing new under the sun. The most important factor is have a plan and sticking with it, if its not going well try some alternative ideas but never give up trying to do your best.


🔥 The Winning Formula in One Line

Explosive top order + disciplined bowling + elite death execution + clear roles + fearless mindset = realistic title charge.

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🏏Let’s Go Down Memory Lane: The 1960 Tied Test at the Gabba in Brisbane Australia

Posted on September 11, 2025September 29, 2025 by Harold Gittens

The first test between Australia and the West Indies in the series was play at the Gabba in Brisbane. The year was 1960, quite a long time ago. I was one year old so I dont think my memory cells were sufficiently developed to have a clue that there was even a game called cricket.

Many cricket fans who would have read about this game or heard from their parents would agree with their take on that match. Many say it was and still is; one the the greatest matches ever played.

The two captains Richie Benaud and Frank Worrell each declared that the game was the most exciting match in which they have ever played. Sir Donald Bradman who was chairman of the Australian Cricket Board describe the game as “the greatest and most exciting of all time.”

Here’s how that day in 1960 and the game unfolded:

The Brisbane Cricket Ground, December sun blazing down. A sea of 90,000 voices surged, knowing they were witnessing something that would echo through time. The West Indies, led by the regal Frank Worrell, carried not just skill but a sense of pride, grace, and steel. Facing them, Australia under the wily Richie Benaud, determined, calculating, and unwilling to let history slip away.

West Indies’ first innings:

The calypso flair was on full display. Conrad Hunte stroked a polished 116, while the majestic Garry Sobers, young but already a phenomenon, carved 132 with strokes that dripped with brilliance. Wes Hall, tall and terrifying, later charged in with thunderbolts, his pace shaking the Australians to their core.

Australia’s reply:

Enter Norm O’Neill — stylish, unflappable. His 181 was an innings of silk and steel, carrying Australia within touching distance of parity. Alan Davidson, limping, bruised, but lion-hearted, fought for every run, a man refusing to yield to pain.

The climax — Australia’s chase of 233 in the fourth innings:

The crowd crackled with tension. Worrell marshalled his men like a general at war. Hall, exhausted but possessed by fire, bowled over after over, his shirt clinging to his back. Benaud countered with daring cuts and drives, eyes blazing with resolve.

The scoreboard tightened. Australia edged closer. Davidson, again the warrior, lashed boundaries despite his injuries. Every wicket was greeted by roars, every boundary by gasps. The clock, the crowd, the players — all seemed to pulse as one.

And then, the final over. Australia needed 6 runs, 1 wicket in hand. Hall pounding in, sweat pouring, his legs barely carrying him. Davidson was run out. The scores level. One wicket left. The very next ball — Hall thundered in, a blur, the crowd holding its breath. Ian Meckiff pushed, scampered, and chaos erupted — run out!

The scoreboard froze: Australia 232 all out. Match tied.

Not victory, not defeat. Something rarer. Something immortal. Players from both sides, exhausted and exultant, embraced in the middle. In that moment, cricket had written poetry in sweat, dust, and courage.

The cast of immortals that day:

• West Indies: Frank Worrell (c), Conrad Hunte, Rohan Kanhai, Garry Sobers, Joe Solomon, Gerry Alexander (wk), Denis Atkinson, Wes Hall, Alf Valentine, Sonny Ramadhin, Roy Gilchrist.

• Australia: Richie Benaud (c), Bob Simpson, Colin McDonald, Norm O’Neill, Neil Harvey, Wally Grout (wk), Alan Davidson, Ken Mackay, Lindsay Kline, Ian Meckiff, Garth McKenzie.

Was it the greatest match ever played? What are your memories of the game?

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Hey! I'm Harold G

Harold M Gittens

My Voice in the Game We Love

I am a Sales Executive and Life Coach by profession, but at heart, I have always been a student and admirer of cricket. This game has given us unforgettable memories, uniting people across cultures, generations, and nations. Over the years, cricket has evolved—new formats have emerged, new heroes have risen—but at its core, it remains the game we love.

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