West Indies destroyed by lesser mortals
Brisbane, Australia (AFP)- Skipper Jason Holder said he expected the
West Indies to be heavily criticised after an alarming 10-wicket loss to
the Cricket Australia XI on Saturday just days before their opening Test
with Australia.

Jason Holder |
In what will only add to concerns about the Windies' level of
competitiveness ahead of the three-Test series, the tourists buckled to
an ignominious defeat in their only warm-up game ahead of next week's
first Test in Hobart.
The tourists only managed to narrowly avoid an innings defeat with
skipper Jason Holder scoring 65 off 99 balls to leave the home side with
just 10 runs to win.CA XI openers Tim Paine (6) and Jake Carder (7)
needed just 17 balls to rustle up the required runs and inflict an
embarrassing defeat on the West Indies.
Holder was trying to put on a brave face after the humiliation
against a cobbled-together young side, featuring six players making
their first-class debuts.
"Obviously we are going to cop a bit of criticism but we need to
improve no doubt about it," Holder told reporters. "We are at a stage
now where we need to make strides forward, we have been stagnant the
last few months. We need to pick ourselves up, look ourselves in the
mirror and find something in ourselves."
The Windies are a pale imitation of their glory days a quarter of a
century ago and have been written off by the pundits heading into the
Test series. The once-formidable West Indies last won a Test in
Australia in 1997 and last won a series here in 1992-93.
The second-ranked Australians are again expected to be too strong for
the eighth-rated West Indies in the series, starting in Hobart on
December 10.
The Caribbean tourists were bowled out for 243 and 210 by a rookie CA
XI attack that pales in comparison to the Australian line-up waiting for
them in Tasmania, albeit without left-arm quicks Mitchell Starc (injury)
and Mitchell Johnson (retirement).
And their bowling arsenal hardly fired a shot as the CA XI amassed
444 off 104.2 overs in their first innings.
Holder was one of the few shining lights for the visitors.Apart from
his second innings half-century, Holder thrashed 26 in their first dig
and took 4-76 with the ball.
There will be some soul searching ahead for the Windies side as they
search for answers to stay in the contest against Steve Smith's
Australians, who last week clinched a 2-0 home series win over New
Zealand. |