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Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Pollard: No excuses for batting implosion

by

Sports Desk
1491 days ago
20210722
West Indies ODI captain Kieron Pollard.

West Indies ODI captain Kieron Pollard.

BRIDGETOWN – Cap­tain Kieron Pol­lard has re­fused to en­ter­tain ex­cus­es for West In­dies’ chas­ten­ing 133-run de­feat in Tues­day’s night open­ing One-Day In­ter­na­tion­al against Aus­tralia.

In pur­suit of 257 for vic­to­ry at Kens­ing­ton Oval in Bar­ba­dos, West In­dies plunged to 123 all out in the 27th over, to fall be­hind in the three-match ODI se­ries.

And though West In­dies have had a Twen­ty20-laden sched­ule in re­cent months, Pol­lard brushed aside the sug­ges­tion his side strug­gled to make the tran­si­tion to the 50-overs for­mat, point­ing rather to a lack of “fight” and “soft dis­missals”, as the rea­sons be­hind the poor ef­fort.

“If you say that, then that’s an ex­cuse be­cause in the [Sri Lan­ka] se­ries pri­or to this we played three T20 match­es be­fore the 50 overs and we were able to go and chase dif­fer­ent to­tals at dif­fer­ent times,” Pol­lard ar­gued.

“Ob­vi­ous­ly the per­son­nel is dif­fer­ent, yes a cou­ple guys would have played in that T20 se­ries, [but] the mode of dis­missals wasn’t ac­tu­al­ly one of guys ‘swip­ing out their hands’.

“They were soft dis­missals, maybe some­times a lit­tle bit of tech­ni­cal de­fi­cien­cies in ne­go­ti­at­ing what was thrown up at us.

“So if we look to go down that road [of ex­cus­es], to me it would be tak­ing the gloss off the good things we have done in the T20 se­ries.”

He con­tin­ued: “So let’s not go down that road and let’s just put it down to that we weren’t able to adapt to the high qual­i­ty bowl­ing that was pre­sent­ed to us last night, and hope­ful­ly with a cou­ple dis­cus­sions … let’s see what hap­pens in the next ODI.”

West In­dies were ripped apart by Man-of-the-Match left-arm seam­er Mitchell Starc who claimed five for 48 and new ball part­ner Josh Ha­zle­wood, who picked up three for 11.

Evin Lewis fell to the very first ball of the run chase, caught and bowled by Starc, who then re­moved Ja­son Mo­hammed’s off-stump in his next over, the third of the in­nings with four runs on the board.

Wick­ets then fell steadi­ly as West In­dies found them­selves tot­ter­ing on 27 for six in the eighth over be­fore Pol­lard lashed 56 off 57 balls, in a 68-run, sev­enth wick­et stand with Alzarri Joseph (17), to sal­vage some pride.

Pol­lard ad­mit­ted the bat­ting per­for­mance had been dif­fi­cult to put in­to words but point­ed to the in­abil­i­ty of bats­men to cope with the Aussies new-ball burst.

“Some­times with per­for­mances like that, you don’t have words to ac­tu­al­ly de­scribe it,” Pol­lard said.

“It was there for every­one to see that we didn’t have that fight from a bat­ting per­spec­tive. There were a cou­ple soft dis­missals.

“And we know Aus­tralia are very, very dan­ger­ous with the new ball, es­pe­cial­ly Mitchell Starc in the first two or three overs, and we weren’t able to ne­go­ti­ate that.

“They broke the back of us very ear­ly and at 27 for six af­ter less than ten overs, you’re ask­ing for trou­ble.”

He added: “It’s not some­thing that we take very light­ly and we are very, very dis­ap­point­ed about what tran­spired from a bat­ting per­spec­tive.”

West In­dies face Aus­tralia in the sec­ond ODI here­in Bar­ba­dos to­day (Thurs­day).

CMC


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