Ian Wason
Sport Correspondent
Ian1wason60@gmail.com
West Indies and Sri Lanka will renew their Test rivalry tomorrow at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, where local form may counter the overall numbers that favour the visitors.
At North Sound, the Windies have lost only two Tests (both to India) and have won five of 13 matches there — a venue record that gives the hosts confidence heading into the series opener.
“We’re searching for that first win, but Antigua has been a venue that has been really, really good to us,” Head Coach Daren Sammy said on Saturday, “All our preparation, meetings and practice have been tailored to how we’re going to win against Sri Lanka.”
Yet across the full history between the sides, Sri Lanka holds the edge. Since their first Test meeting in 1993, Sri Lanka has won 10 of 23 Tests to the West Indies’ four. Sri Lanka has also retained the Sobers-Tissera Trophy since 2005 after a 2-0 victory, and the West Indies’ last series triumph over Sri Lanka came in 2003.
Despite those lifetime figures, Sri Lanka’s success has largely come in Asia; they have yet to secure a series win in the Caribbean. Sammy is banking on home conditions to level the contest.
“We’ve trained specifically for the conditions we expect here in Antigua and how to match the Sri Lankan skill set,” he said. “We’ve looked at the surface and have a fair idea of how it will play, so all our preparation has been tailored towards that.”
The Antigua Test also marks the return of fast bowler Alzarri Joseph to the West Indies Test side after a year out with a lower-back injury. His comeback – alongside fellow pacer Shamar Joseph, who also missed Tests in India and New Zealand – strengthens a seam attack that was weakened late last season.
“For me, I’m really happy to have my four-pronged pace attack back in Shamar, the two Josephs and Jayden (Seales),” Sammy said. “We missed them at the back end of last season, so having them back, plus the experience of Kemar Roach, is a real plus.”
Wicketkeeper Joshua da Silva also returns to the Test XI after a 17-month absence since the drawn Pakistan series in January 2025. Da Silva’s strong domestic season — 415 runs at an average of 59 in the West Indies Championship — earned him a recall and positions him to resume keeping duties while Shai Hope continues as a specialist batsman after scoring consecutive Test centuries and averaging 49 since relinquishing the gloves.
The Sir Vivian Richards surface favoured pace during the domestic championship, a factor that could see spin vice-captain Jomel Warrican omitted in favour of the returning seam quartet of Alzarri Joseph, Shamar Joseph, Jayden Seales and Kemar Roach. Roach sits third on the Windies–Sri Lanka leading wicket-takers list with 32 scalps.
