The West Indian cricket team, also known colloquially as The Windies, is a national cricket team representing a sporting confederation of a dozen English-speaking Caribbean countries and British dependencies.
The history of the West Indies cricket team begins in the 1890s, when the first representative sides were selected to play visiting English sides. Administered by the West Indies Cricket Board ("WICB")See, for example, the official website of the West Indies Cricket Board ( http://www.windiescricket.com/ ), and known colloquially as The Windies, the West Indies cricket team represents a sporting confederation of English-speaking Caribbean countries.
The WICB joined the sport's international ruling body, the Imperial Cricket Council, in 1926See CricketArchive, for example, for a reference to when Test status was acquired, and played their first official international match, granted Test status, in 1928#See, for example, 75 Years of West Indies Cricket 1928-2003 by Ray Goble and Keith AP Sandiford ISBN 1-870518-78-0, the WICB authorised reference book on cricket in the West Indies. For more information on the first Test played by the Windies, see http://www.cricinfo.com/db/NATIONAL/WI/SERIES/TOURS.html . See also the scorecard of the First Test played by the West Indies.. Although blessed with some great players in their early days as a Test nation, their successes remained sporadic until the 1960s, by which time the side had changed from a white-dominated to a black-dominated side. By the 1970s, the West Indies had a side recognised as unofficial world champions, a title they retained throughout the 1980sUntil June 2001 there was no official ranking of Test nations, with the unofficial epithet of "World champions" being decided by acclaim based on recent results. Although exactly when the West Indies became and ceased to be world champions is therefore disputed - that they were world champions for a prolonged period of time is not. During these glory years, the Windies were noted for their four-man fast bowling attack, backed up by some of the best batsmen in the world. The 1980s saw them set a then-record streak of 11 consecutive Test victories in 1984 and inflict two 5–0 "blackwashes" against the old enemy of England. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, however, West Indian cricket declined, largely due to the failure of the West Indian Cricket Board to move the game from an amateur pastime to a professional sport coupled with the general economic decline in West Indian countries, and the team today is struggling to regain its past gloryThe West Indies are currently ranked 8th out of the 10 Test playing nations, and 8th in the one-day international rankings, which likewise only cover the 10 Test playing nations. The current tables can be found on the ICC homepage.
In their early days in the 1930s, the side represented the British colonies of the West Indies Federation plus British Guyana. The current side represents the now independent states of Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Trinidad and Tobago, and the British dependencies of Anguilla and Montserrat. See note 1 National teams also exist for the various different islands, which, as they are all separate countries, very much keep their local identities and support their local favourites. These national teams take part in the West Indian first-class competition, the Carib Beer Cup (earlier known as the Busta Cup, Shell Shield and various other names)For the results of domestic competitions see http://www.cricinfo.com or http://www.cricketarchive.com. It is also common for other international teams to play the island teams for warm-up games before they take on the combined West Indies team.
Most cricketing nations use their own national flags for cricketing purposes. However, as the West Indies represent a number of independent and dependent states, there is no natural choice of emblem. The WICB has therefore developed an insignia showing a palm tree and cricket stumps on a small sunny island. This insignia, on a maroon background, makes up the West Indian flag. The background sometimes has a white stripe above a green stripe, which is separated by a maroon stripe, passing horizontally through the middle of the background.Flags of the World page on the WICB flag
Three further stadia have been used for one-day internationalsSee CricketArchive for a list of stadia that have hosted home West Indian ODIs, but not Test matches. The number of one-day internationals played at each venue is in brackets:
When playing first-class cricket, in addition to their cricket whites, West Indian fielders sometimes wear a sunhat, which is maroon and has a wide brim. The WICB logo is on the middle of the front of the hat. Helmets are coloured similarly.
During World Series Cricket and the early 1980's, the secondary colour of the West Indies cricket team's clothing was grey. In some of their uniforms grey was dominant over the traditional maroon.
The West Indian women's cricket team has a much smaller profile than the men's team. They played 11 Test matches between 1975-76 and 1979, winning once, losing three times, and drawing the other games. Since then, they have only played one further Test match, a draw game against Pakistan in 2003-04.CricketArchive has details of the Tests played by the West Indian women's cricket team They also have an infrequent record in one-day internationals. A team from Trinidad and Tobago and a team from Jamaica played in the first women's World Cup in 1973, with both sides faring poorly, finishing fifth and sixth respectively out of a field of sevenCricketArchive shows the 1973 women's World Cup table. The Windies united as a team to play their first ODI in 1979, but thereafter did not play until the 1993 World Cup. The side has never been one of the leading sides in the world, however, with their main success being achieving second place in the International Women's Cricket Council Trophy, a competition for the second tier of women's national cricket teams, in 2003. They finished in fifth place in the most recent World Cup, which was held in 2004-05. Their overall record in one-dayers is to have played 45, won 17, lost 27 with one no result.CricketArchive has detailed records of the West Indies women's ODI results
Because of the women's side's relatively low profile, there are few well-known names in the game. The most notable is probably Nadine George, a wicket-keeper/batsman, who became the first, and to date only, West Indian woman to score a Test century in Karachi, Pakistan in 2003-04. George is a prominent supporter of sport in the West Indies, and in particular in her native St Lucia, and in 2005 was made an MBE by HRH The Prince of Wales for services to sport.See Wikipedia's own article on Nadine George, or Cricinfo's article on George receiving the MBE
The following players went on the West Indies' most recent complete tour, a tour of Australia in November 2005, where they played three Test matches:
| Name | Domestic team | Role | Tests played on tour | FCs played |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Captain | ||||
| Wicket-keeper | ||||
| Opening batsmen | ||||
| Specialist middle-order batsmen | ||||
| All-rounder | ||||
| Fast bowlers | ||||
The team is now hosting the Zimbabwe Cricket team in a ODI series, after an unsuccessful tour of New Zealand.
A list the most notable players, by decade in which they first represented the West Indies, is below:
The following men have captained the West Indian cricket team in at least one Test match:
| West Indian Test match captains | ||
|---|---|---|
| Number | Name | Period |
| 1 | Karl Nunes | 1928-1929/30 |
| 2 | Teddy Hoad | 1929/30 |
| 3 | Nelson Betancourt | 1929/30 |
| 4 | Maurice Fernandes | 1929/30 |
| 5 | Jackie Grant1 | 1930/31-1934/35 |
| 6 | Rolph Grant1 | 1939 |
| 7 | George Headley | 1947/48 |
| 8 | Gerry Gomez | 1947/48 |
| 9 | John Goddard | 1947/48-1951/52, 1957 |
| 10 | Jeffrey Stollmeyer | 1951/52-1954/55 |
| 11 | Denis Atkinson | 1954/55-1955/56 |
| 12 | Gerry Alexander | 1957/58-1959/60 |
| 13 | Frank Worrell | 1960/61-1963 |
| 14 | Garfield Sobers | 1964/65-1971/72 |
| 15 | Rohan Kanhai | 1972/73-1973/74 |
| 16 | Clive Lloyd | 1974/75-1977/78, 1979/80-1984/85 |
| 17 | Alvin Kallicharran | 1977/78-1978/79 |
| 18 | Deryck Murray | 1979/80 |
| 19 | Viv Richards | 1980, 1983/84-1991 |
| 20 | Gordon Greenidge | 1987/88 |
| 21 | Desmond Haynes | 1989/90-1990/91 |
| 22 | Richie Richardson | 1991/92-1995 |
| 23 | Courtney Walsh | 1993/94-1997/98 |
| 24 | Brian Lara | 1996/97-1999/2000, 2002/03-2004, 2006-present |
| 25 | Jimmy Adams | 1999/2000-2000/01 |
| 26 | Carl Hooper | 2000/01-2002/03 |
| 27 | Ridley Jacobs | 2002/03 |
| 28 | Shivnarine Chanderpaul | 2004/05-2005/06 |
Note: 1 Jackie and Rolph Grant were brothers
Caribbean | National cricket teams | Cricket in the West Indies
Équipe des Indes Occidentales de cricket | Na h-Innseachan an Iar (Sgioba Criogaid)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"West Indian cricket team".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world