BRIDGETOWN – Oman captain Aqib Ilyas says pre-tournament camps in Barbados and Trinidad helped his side acclimatise to Caribbean conditions, ahead of their opening game of the Twenty20 World Cup against Namibia Barbados later Sunday.
The Gulf State will clash with Namibia at 7.30 pm in the third game of the ICC showpiece at storied Kensington Oval, and Ilyas believes the time spent in Barbados was critical for the squad.
“The first thing is it’s really great to be part of the main stage [of the] World Cup T20 and Oman has done really well,” he said.
“Over the years, they’ve been qualifying in the eliminators and now we have made it to the main stage and our preparations, they are really good.
“First good thing is our management, they got us before over here three weeks [and] we had a camp in Barbados so we can get acclimatized to the situation.
“And then the thing is the wickets and everything, we played three games over here which were really useful to us in Barbados. We got to know that the wickets are a bit at a slower side and we had some quality practice games.
“After that we went to Trinidad where we played two practice games – one against [Papua New Guinea] and Afghanistan which Oman did really well.
“It’s motivating us and … we are not thinking much about all the games. First game is against Namibia so we are focusing on the first game and we are thinking on the positives only.”
Namibia, meanwhile, will be featuring in their third successive T20 World Cup, after topping their African qualifying group.
And captain Gerhard Erasmus also said familiarising themselves with the conditions had been key to their preparations.
“We’ve been here for a fair while now. So St Kitts was good, Trinidad was very good, so different to what we’re used to with humidity and stuff but we pride ourselves on good fitness and good standards,” he said.
“It’s been getting used to and acclimatised to perhaps only the humidity and the type of sweatiness and perhaps on and off showers, that type of thing.”
Kensington Oval will host nine matches in the T20 World Cup – five in the group stage, three in the Super Eight second stage, and the final on June 29
The venue has already staged two ICC finals – the 2007 50-over World Cup and the 2010 T20 World Cup.
CMC