West Indies' Test-match batting a symptom of far deeper issues

Head coach Sammy is trying to address some of those but he faces an unimaginably difficult task

Karthik Krishnaswamy07-Oct-20255:49

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If West Indies harboured any hopes of causing a ripple on their two-Test tour of India, those hopes must have largely rested on their pace trio of Jayden Seales, Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph, who had taken 48 wickets at a combined average of 18.52 in their last Test series before this one, at home against Australia.With both Josephs lost to injury before the series even began, it was no surprise that West Indies looked at no stage of the first Test to be on a level footing with India. They simply didn’t have the bowling to compete with a deep, incisive and varied India attack.Even so, should West Indies really have been bowled out for 162 and 146 on that Ahmedabad pitch? It had an unusual amount of grass for an Indian pitch, but it was still one on which West Indies, winning the toss, chose to bat first, reckoning, probably correctly, that it was still enough of an Indian pitch to make batting fourth significantly harder than batting first.The Test match, in the end, didn’t need a fourth innings at all.Related

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For fans of West Indies, there was a familiar ring to how the batting unravelled. Their totals of 162 and 146 were their 12th and 13th sub-200 totals in their last 15 Test innings. Neither of their innings in Ahmedabad lasted 50 overs – it was the ninth time this had happened in that 15-innings stretch, which also includes one innings that lasted exactly 50 overs. Not once in those 15 innings had West Indies batted out 90 overs, or a full day of Test cricket.Even when you throw in the mitigating factor of tricky batting conditions – both at home against Australia and Bangladesh, and in the dustbowls of Multan, where they drew 1-1 with Pakistan – these are alarming numbers.And they point to a deeper issue in West Indies cricket, a long-running struggle to produce batters ready for Test cricket. Collectively, West Indies batters average 21.83 since the start of 2020. No batting team in Test cricket has done worse.And they have only scored 14 hundreds in 43 Tests, during which their batters have played a combined 867 innings. Their batters have scored centuries, in short, at a rate of approximately one every 62 innings. That rate is also, by far, the worst of any Test team in this decade.