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Exciting times ahead for Windies – Estwick

Published:Saturday | December 14, 2019 | 12:25 AM
Windies’ players celebrate the dismissal of India’s Rishabh Pant during their third Twenty20 international cricket match in Mumbai, India, on Wednesday.
Windies’ players celebrate the dismissal of India’s Rishabh Pant during their third Twenty20 international cricket match in Mumbai, India, on Wednesday.

CHENNAI, India (CMC):

Despite a recent disappointing record in One-Day Internationals (ODI), assistant coach Roddy Estwick believes the signs are there that the Windies are about to turn around their fortunes in the format.

Speaking ahead of tomorrow’s start of the three-match ODI series against India at the M.A. Chidambaram Stadium, Estwick said not only did the Caribbean side possess the quality players necessary but were also beginning to develop a high-class work ethic in their preparation.

“It’s exciting times for us. When you look at somebody like (Shimron) Hetmyer, (Nicholas) Pooran, Shai Hope – we’ve got young batsmen who are developing,” he told a media conference here yesterday.

“But the key thing is how you prepare, if you’re prepared to work hard and you’ve got a benchmark in Virat Kohli – somebody who you will see in the gym and will work very, very hard, and once our ­players can learn from players like that, then we’ve got a chance because without hard work there’s no success, and hard work is boring but it gives you great success.

“Once they can learn and keep working, keep dealing with the process, then they’ve got a chance.”

The Windies have struggled in ODIs in recent years and currently languish at number nine, ahead only of the likes of minnows Afghanistan, Ireland and Zimbabwe.

However, the year began with much promise when they held world number ones England to a 2-2 draw in a five-match series in the Caribbean. But a wretched World Cup campaign where they managed just two wins in nine matches and finished ninth, coupled with a subsequent series loss to India at home, saw their form slump again.

Estwick said the players had lifted themselves well for the ongoing subcontinent tour, however, and reflected the high level of professionalism required.

“They’ve been brilliant on this tour. We can’t fault them on this tour at all, they’ve worked really hard and they’re beginning to see the results,” he pointed out.

“If you look at Hetmyer’s play in the Twenty20 [it’s been] very, very exciting. Now we go to the longer format and people forget that already at a very young age he’s got four ODI hundreds, so obviously there’s a lot of talent there and once he keeps working – and that’s the key, you cannot rest with cricket, you cannot relax.

“Once you rest with cricket, it will bite you so you’ve got to keep preparing, keep your processes and once you keep doing that, then you will get the results.”