Thu | Dec 19, 2024

Sir Clive criticises Windies planning

Published:Friday | October 29, 2021 | 12:08 AM
West Indies’ Nicholas Pooran (right) looks back to South African bowler Keshav Maharaj after he was dismissed during their ICC Men’s T20 World Cup match in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Tuesday.
West Indies’ Nicholas Pooran (right) looks back to South African bowler Keshav Maharaj after he was dismissed during their ICC Men’s T20 World Cup match in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Tuesday.
LLOYD
LLOYD
1
2

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC):

Former West Indies captain Sir Clive Lloyd has criticised the team’s planning and says its form at the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup reflects that of an “associate country”, and not defending champions.

West Indies are staring at an early exit from the tournament in the United Arab Emirates after losing their opening two games, going down to England by six wickets on Saturday and then crashing to an eight-wicket defeat to South Africa on Tuesday.

The loss to England saw them bundled out for 55 – their lowest ever Twenty20 World Cup total and second lowest in T20 Internationals.

“Their planning seems to be all over the place,” Sir Clive said. “If you look at what has happened – 55 runs, we’re better than that and the point is, too, that our planning seems to be terrible.

“We had a wonderful start [against South Africa] and we didn’t promote people in the proper order. You would expect the captain (Kieron Pollard) to come up and when you’re going at nine [runs] an over.

“You send in [Nicholas] Pooran, who has not been playing well and you have [Shimron] Hetmyer, who is batting quite well, and has made some very good scores, so their batting order seems to be all over the place.”

West Indies looked to be turning their fortunes around when they raced to 73 without loss against South Africa but collapsed at the back end to slump to an inadequate 143 for eight off their 20 overs.

Opener Evin Lewis top-scored with 56 from 35 balls but Pollard was the only other batsman to pass 20 with 26 as wickets fell steadily.

Sir Clive, a former chairman of selectors and team manager, said with their success in the powerplay, West Indies should have mounted a more competitive total but were let down by a muddled approach to their batting in the last 10 overs.

“In the powerplay, if you get to 50 and you haven’t lost a lot of wickets, you’ve done very well,” Sir Clive told Starcom Radio’s Mason and Guest cricket talk show here.

“You are looking at a large score – at one stage the predictor said they would make 174, but somewhere along the line we felt that this game was about hitting sixes. We were getting caught on the boundary. This is a big, big ground.

“If I’m 58, I’m looking to be 80 or 90. I’m looking to get some runs if I’m an opener and take the game away from the opposition. We were 30 runs short [against South Africa]. We batted until number eight and we still can’t get there.”

The two defeats have left West Indies with only a long shot of finishing in the top two of Group 1 and qualifying for the semi-finals.

Lloyd captained the Windies to One-Day International World Cup glory in 1975 and 1979.