BAD NEWS: West Indies star Nicholas Pooran just pass away now due to…

The most obvious example of the problem facing Test cricket—namely, how to maintain its health in areas where it isn’t flourishing—occurs in the Caribbean.
We have already covered every tale there is to tell about the tragic fall of West Indies cricket. read, heard, and written them. Tour after tour of longing for the old days, reciting like a fast-bowling rosary the names of the former greats. What’s happened is that there was a lot less of this stuff when the current side was defeated by 10 wickets before lunch on day three in Adelaide. Their mourning has become archaic, as the glorious days seem so far behind us.

 

Okay, that’s also fair. It has been almost 50 years since the beginning of the glorious West Indies era. Even

The television show that concluded with Brendon Julian mentioning that Australia had kept the Frank Worrell Trophy was the best example. Though he was careful not to repeat the disastrous spoonerism he did during the 2015 series, the statement was a brief digression before a lengthy commercial break and match replay began.

In 1995, after West Indies teams had held it for eight series in a row, Australia finally claimed the greatest prize in the globe. The magnificent 1960–61 West Indies visit was the subject of intense popular passion, which led to the creation of this trophy. Currently, it’s an afterthought, with the recipient chosen following the first match of this two-Test

In forty-five years, the ladies of the West Indies have played one Test match and are unlikely to play any more. Men from the West Indies remain functional at the lowest end of the spectrum. They have won a few against Pakistan and Sri Lanka, usually defeating Bangladesh and Zimbabwe, and they manage to win series against England when they are in the country while also winning the occasional Test match when they are away.

However, they haven’t defeated New Zealand in a Test match in almost a decade. They haven’t defeated South Africa since 2007. They haven’t defeated Australia since 2003. In 2002, India was the opponent. In Australia, it was the last time in 1997. Or consider it like this: Our last 50 Test victories as West Indies take us back to that historic one at Kingston

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