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Australia tour of West Indies (2025)

Inglis, Green power Australia to comprehensive T20 win

The Western Australian duo spoiled the party for retiring Jamaican star Andre Russell

Josh Inglis and Cameron Green have spoiled hometown hero Andre Russell's international farewell as Australia cantered to a thumping eight-wicket win over West Indies in the second T20 in Jamaica.

Inglis (78 off 33 balls) and Green (56 off 32) shared an unbeaten 131-run third-wicket partnership as the West Australian pair comfortably overhauled West Indies 8-172 with 28 balls remaining at Sabina Park as the tourists took a 2-0 lead in the five-match series.

Adam Zampa (3-29) and Glenn Maxwell (2-15) did the damage in restricting the hosts as Australia went spin heavy for the second match on the Kingston surface, leaving out paceman Sean Abbott to hand left-armer Matthew Kuhnemann a T20 international debut.

Retiring allrounder Russell briefly sent his home Jamaican crowd into a frenzy with four sixes to remind the world that he'll remain one of the most destructive hitters on the franchise circuit.

The 37-year-old, who admitted he was nervous to do well in front his home crowd one final time, received a guard of honour from both sides and cricket bat-shaped guitar wrapped in the country’s flag before the first ball to commemorate his 15-year international career.

But his farewell was overshadowed by Inglis and Green's scintillating stand, the latter hitting the winning runs in the 16th over to see Australia continue their recent dominance in the shortest format.

Inglis and Green exploded after the Powerplay as they benefited from three dropped catches in the one Gudakesh Motie over, the former getting a life on nine while the latter received two reprieves on three.

Inglis made the hosts pay next over as he took Alzarri Joseph for 19, then reaching a 22-ball half-century by launching Russell's first delivery of the evening onto the roof at the Michael Holding End.

Russell's first over cost him 16 as Inglis brought the game towards a rapid conclusion, Green joining in as he made it consecutive half-centuries from No.4.

Australia's earlier experiment with Glenn Maxwell opening to counter spinner Akeal Hosein with the new ball was brief but somewhat effective as he latched onto two reverse sweeps to take 10 runs from the first over of the chase.

With Jake Fraser-McGurk omitted after managing just two off seven balls in the series opener on Sunday, Maxwell partnered skipper Mitch Marsh (21) at the top but like his predecessor, he also fell to Jason Holder on the final ball of the second over as he edged behind for 12.

Kuhnemann was straight into the action on debut with the opening over in a change of tactics from the Australians as they sent down six straight overs of spin to start from the Michael Holding End.

Kuhnemann began strongly despite being hit for a boundary with his first delivery in T20 internationals as West Indies were watchful after again being sent in by Marsh, progressing to 0-17 in the first three overs after smashing 32 against the pace in the same period in the series opener.

But Brandon King took full toll when the Brisbane Heat left-armer returned for his third over of the Powerplay, clearing the rope twice over long on and crunching two boundaries through the off-side to get the hosts innings going.

The Jamaica native was 13 off 18 at one point but raced to his half-century from 33 balls, his third fifty for West Indies in six innings at his home ground in Kingston.

However, the right-hander was out to end the same over as he chipped Adam Zampa up in air trying to take him down the ground and Australia struck back with consecutive wickets with Maxwell (2-15) striking in similar fashion with his first ball as opening partner Shai Hope (9) followed King back to the sheds.

Kuhnemann responded in his final over of the evening to finish with a respectable 0-33 in his first outing as Shimron Hetmyer – promoted to No.3 – became Maxwell's second victim and Zampa (3-29) struck twice in the 14th over to leave the hosts in a spot of bother at 5-98.

Russell gave the innings some much needed impetus to delight his home fans, crashing three of his first five balls over the rope as Ben Dwarshuis (1-37) was the one to cop the full force of the big-hitting Jamaican for the final time in international cricket.

The first of those sixes couldn’t be found under the black tarps being used for the sightscreen, while the third disappeared into the college across the road to make it two lost balls in the over.

The joy was short lived as Russell (36 off 15) departed with handshakes from the entire Australian side after offering wicketkeeper Inglis possibly one of the highest catches even seen, swirling around above the shallow Sabina Park lights before eventually nestling in his gloves.

Australia dropped three chances an uncharacteristically subpar fielding display, with two of those proving costly at the death as West Indies finished in a flurry as 28 runs came off the final two overs.

Dwarshuis' missed catch running in at point in the final over denied newcomer Mitch Owen a second T20 international wicket and cost him seven runs as the batters scampered a single before Gudakesh Motie (18no off 9) launched the penultimate ball of the innings into the crowd, which he wouldn't have been facing if the catch was completed.

The victory takes Australia's run against West Indies to seven wins from their past eight matches as they eye their third straight T20 series win over the two-time world champions as the teams move to St Kitts for the final three T20Is.

 
Australia once again proving to be ridiculously strong at T20 cricket.

Early favourites , along with maybe India for the next World T20.

Complete 180 from their ODI side. Although selecting Renshaw might mitigate their issues in that format as well.
 
Australia once again proving to be ridiculously strong at T20 cricket.

Early favourites , along with maybe India for the next World T20.

Complete 180 from their ODI side. Although selecting Renshaw might mitigate their issues in that format as well.
You know who I'm supporting in t20 :vk2 .

It's settled next WTC: England
Next t20: Australia
Next odi: South Africa
 
Green has improved in t20 thanks to test cricket, one of the greatest talents in the world
 
West Indies got off to a flying start in the 3rd T20I. They cruising at over 10 runs per over and are currently 0/94 in 9 overs.
 
All over.

Australia win by 6 wickets with 23 balls to spare. They go up 3-0 in the series.

Tim David also scores his maiden T20I century (37-ball century).
 
Brutal from Tim David.

1-14 has been WI's win loss record in T20I cricket since 15th October(excluding Ireland)

T20 side is getting wrecked along with the Test side.

Just not enough talent in the Caribbean for 3 formats.
 
Brutal from Tim David.

1-14 has been WI's win loss record in T20I cricket since 15th October(excluding Ireland)

T20 side is getting wrecked along with the Test side.

Just not enough talent in the Caribbean for 3 formats.

Ian Bishop mentioned they won only 2 games out of their last 18 T20Is. :inti

Going through a bad patch.
 
Ian Bishop mentioned they won only 2 games out of their last 18 T20Is. :inti

Going through a bad patch.
That's the stats I put up + the Ireland series.

Sammy coming under a lot of pressure.

Windies simply can't play their best players in all formats all the time and they don't have the bench strength as the results show
 
Australia once again proving to be ridiculously strong at T20 cricket.

Early favourites , along with maybe India for the next World T20.

Complete 180 from their ODI side. Although selecting Renshaw might mitigate their issues in that format as well.
We have a tour of aus coming up in October. It should give us a reasonable idea. All the aussie batsmen did not do much in Indian conditions/ipl. If we have all our players in good shape, we should be winning it in our backyard.India should give a go for both kuldeep and varun against sena teams.Pandya and reddy can take care of seamer quota.
 
We have a tour of aus coming up in October. It should give us a reasonable idea. All the aussie batsmen did not do much in Indian conditions/ipl. If we have all our players in good shape, we should be winning it in our backyard.India should give a go for both kuldeep and varun against sena teams.Pandya and reddy can take care of seamer quota.

Australia should beat the leaving daylight out of India if they play a full side. :inti
 
Why are you not a fan? :inti

I like his batting. Great hitter.

He used to play for Singapore. He switched to Australia.
By not a fan i dont mean to disrespect him. You can be a great player yet not appeal to some fans?

For example Sangakkara is a goat player but he doesn't appeal to me that much however Steve smith and Ponting do.

That doesnt mean Sanga isnt a goat however
 
David crushes 11 sixes, Aussie record in St Kitts romp

Tim David cleared the rope 11 times in his 37-ball hundred in the third T20I

Tim David has blazed Australia's fastest ever T20 century to power his side a third straight T20 series victory over West Indies with a six-wicket thrashing in St Kitts.

David crashed 11 sixes as he brought up his maiden T20 ton in just 37 balls as Australia made a mockery of West Indies' 4-214, winning with 23 balls to spare to take an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series.

The right-hander was the dominant force in Australia adding 71 runs in a three-over stretch from the 10th to 12th overs as Mitch Owen contributed five while standing out the other end watching David put ball after ball out of the postage-stamp sized Warner Park in Basseterre.

The West Australian had walked in at No.5 with his side under pressure after losing three wickets in the Powerplay but the Hobart Hurricanes pairing of David and Owen (36no off 16) added 128 for the fifth wicket in no time as they took the tourists to their target in the 17th over.

David's knock overshadowed Shai Hope's earlier maiden T20 international century as he became just the second West Indian after Chris Gayle to score a hundred in all three formats.

His smashed Josh Inglis' (43 balls) previous fastest T20 century for Australia by six balls as he sealed the win and his milestone by clipping Romario Shepherd (2-39) to the rope at fine leg to leave the St Kitts crowd in silence.

Fastest centuries for Australia in men's T20Is

37 balls - Tim David v West Indies 2025


43 - Josh Inglis v Scotland 2024

47 - Aaron Finch v England 2013

47 - Josh Inglis v India 2023

47 - Glenn Maxwell v India 2023

He was the beneficiary of a life on 90 as he neared the milestone as Brandon King spilled a sitter on the cow corner boundary.

David had earlier also notched the fastest T20 international half-century for Australia as he hit spinner Gudakesh Motie for four straight sixes in a 28-run over to grab to momentum and power the tourists to 4-120 at the halfway mark.

He then launched Akeal Hosein for a towering six over midwicket and then a boundary through third to register his fifty from just 16 balls, eclipsing Marcus Stoinis and Travis Head's previous mark by one delivery.

David also beat his previous best T20 international fifty by one ball, which he scored for Singapore in 2020.

West Indies took full advantage of the postage stamp-sized Warner Park after being asked to bat first as skipper Hope registered the first century of Australia's Test and T20 Caribbean tour.

Hope cleared the rope six times throughout a superb unbeaten 102 from 57 balls.

Gayle was the first in the world to do it back in 2007, with it taking almost two decades for another Windies batter to achieve the feat. Australia have had five batters score centuries in all three formats – Shane Watson, Glenn Maxwell, David Warner, Josh Inglis and Beth Mooney.

Hope and Brandon King, who notched his second straight fifty of the series, clattered 66 runs from the opening six overs as Maxwell conceded 19 after being tasked with bowling the last over of the Powerplay.

The Windies skipper raced to a 26-ball half-century as the hosts reached 0-106 at the halfway mark, King (62 off 36) going to his half-century in 30 balls shortly after.

Mitch Owen (1-23) brought the opening partnership to an end on 125 when King picked out Abbott on the boundary trying to hit a seventh six, but Hope kept up the onslaught as he took Adam Zampa's third over for 19 with two sixes down the ground.

West Indies made a concerted effort to target the short straight boundaries – knowing Warner Park boasts a maximum radius of just 69m – with 10 of West Indies 13 sixes coming down the ground.

Hope squeezed a single to deep point off Ben Dwarshuis (0-46) to reach his maiden T20 international century off 55 balls from the first delivery of the 19th over, but Australia held West Indies in check late in the innings as Nathan Ellis (1-37) closed out the innings with 16 runs from his final two overs along with the wicket of Rovman Powell (9).

Recalled paceman standout Sean Abbott (0-21) was the standout bowler, going at under six runs per over for his four as Zampa (1-51 from four overs) and Glenn Maxwell (0-31 from two) bore the brunt of the small boundaries.

Maxwell opened for the second straight match, and just the fifth time in his T20 international career, getting Australia's chase off to a flyer as he took 16 runs from debutant Jediah Blades who was handed the first over.

But he was on the wrong end of a barbecue from Mitch Marsh in the third over, the Aussie skipper calling him through for quick single after hitting it straight to cover, with Maxwell (20 off 7) run out by more than a metre at the keeper's end.

Inglis raced to 15 off four with a towering six down the ground off Romario Shepherd before picking out deep square leg two balls later, while Marsh (22 off 19) swung hard but middled few before he edged behind off Jason Holder.

Green, who hit consecutive half-centuries to start the series was then out for 11 chasing a short and wide delivery before David turned the game on its head.

Australia will now be eyeing a series sweep in the final two matches in St Kitts after extending their run to eight wins from nine matches against West Indies.

 
By not a fan i dont mean to disrespect him. You can be a great player yet not appeal to some fans?

For example Sangakkara is a goat player but he doesn't appeal to me that much however Steve smith and Ponting do.

That doesnt mean Sanga isnt a goat however

I see. Makes sense.

I think David is quite inconsistent. It is why he is often not selected for main XI.

He is a good bench player I guess. Can do the job when main players are rested.
 
We have a tour of aus coming up in October. It should give us a reasonable idea. All the aussie batsmen did not do much in Indian conditions/ipl. If we have all our players in good shape, we should be winning it in our backyard.India should give a go for both kuldeep and varun against sena teams.Pandya and reddy can take care of seamer quota.

I don't know. Playing in the IPL is one thing. But they combine better when playing for Australia.

We'll have to be at our very best to beat them even at home.
 
That's the stats I put up + the Ireland series.

Sammy coming under a lot of pressure.

Windies simply can't play their best players in all formats all the time and they don't have the bench strength as the results show
Its hard for me to keep up with players and squads as they change a lot..who is missing from the T20 side as a result or playing 3 formats? I am guessing Shamar Joseph but is there others?
 
These matches are in the middle of the night so haven't watched but wow, WI even in T20 going backwards at the rate of knots.
 
Its hard for me to keep up with players and squads as they change a lot..who is missing from the T20 side as a result or playing 3 formats? I am guessing Shamar Joseph but is there others?

Alzarri also didn't play. The Aussies can keep rotating out their fast bowlers and even guys like Travis Head and still have plenty of quality and depth in all their lineups.

Windies simply can't afford that. Drop off in quality is tremendous.
 
Alzarri also didn't play. The Aussies can keep rotating out their fast bowlers and even guys like Travis Head and still have plenty of quality and depth in all their lineups.

Windies simply can't afford that. Drop off in quality is tremendous.
Unfortunately brining in old school players like Lara, Clive Lloyd who look at West Indies with a heavy dose of nostalgia will not help them and will make matters worse. They are unlikely to ever compete on three formats again.

As bad as it sounds, they are better of getting in players like Pollard. Russell and Bravo as the think tank and trying to work out how to save their T20 because they are at risk of killing it it in the process of saving their test cricket ( which wont happen).
 
Unfortunately brining in old school players like Lara, Clive Lloyd who look at West Indies with a heavy dose of nostalgia will not help them and will make matters worse. They are unlikely to ever compete on three formats again.

As bad as it sounds, they are better of getting in players like Pollard. Russell and Bravo as the think tank and trying to work out how to save their T20 because they are at risk of killing it it in the process of saving their test cricket ( which wont happen).

This is the truth but no one wants to face that reality.

If they continue in this vein , there will be more retirements like Pooran coming up.
 
Unfortunately brining in old school players like Lara, Clive Lloyd who look at West Indies with a heavy dose of nostalgia will not help them and will make matters worse. They are unlikely to ever compete on three formats again.

As bad as it sounds, they are better of getting in players like Pollard. Russell and Bravo as the think tank and trying to work out how to save their T20 because they are at risk of killing it it in the process of saving their test cricket ( which wont happen).
But problem with Pollard, Russell is that they won't evoke any pride in any sense.With straight face they cant ask any young player to prioritize wi cricket.They should be used for back room manoeuvre or setting the framework for buildingthetalent or system. As Ambrose and multiple reports suggested that wi administrators are completely insulated.They dont care much as they know they are not even reprimanded. Even carl hooper in pp interview said Guyana junior cricket program is completely stalled and admits did nothing. Its do or die for windies cricket now.

I wish icc can club the countries like wi, pak, lanka ,bng which are in this kind of situation to be handled by few tough able administrators.
 
But problem with Pollard, Russell is that they won't evoke any pride in any sense.With straight face they cant ask any young player to prioritize wi cricket.They should be used for back room manoeuvre or setting the framework for buildingthetalent or system. As Ambrose and multiple reports suggested that wi administrators are completely insulated.They dont care much as they know they are not even reprimanded. Even carl hooper in pp interview said Guyana junior cricket program is completely stalled and admits did nothing. Its do or die for windies cricket now.

I wish icc can club the countries like wi, pak, lanka ,bng which are in this kind of situation to be handled by few tough able administrators.
A compromise has to be reached for the Windies, prioritising West Indies cricket cant just mean playing tests, as long as players are available for T20 and ODI it should be enough for them. They can have a new style of central contract in place too.

Administrators are to be blamed in the Windies but there is only so much they can do if modern generation doesn't care about cricket.

As far as your suggestion of ICC getting involved in those countries, ICC certainly has a role to play, but international sporting boards have a major share of the responsiblity. If they don't want to play cricket then ICC shouldn't force them. A 2 div test structure will be a wake up call in the short term for those countries rather than being mollycoddled by the ICC.

West Indies are comfortably bottom of the pack out of the 4 you have mentioned too.

Pak has shocking infrastructure and management but a large talent base. Bangladesh has a solid base of cricket too, and lets be honest Sri Lanka is actually a success story given their stocks. I believe Asian countries will pull their socks up at some point but Windies is in a pot of its own.
 
West Indies are comfortably bottom of the pack out of the 4 you have mentioned too.

Pak has shocking infrastructure and management but a large talent base. Bangladesh has a solid base of cricket too, and lets be honest Sri Lanka is actually a success story given their stocks. I believe Asian countries will pull their socks up at some point but Windies is in a pot of its own.
Am not sure about Asian prospects though.we always need a leader of team to set up the good team/legacy for us .it may be Imran, Ganguly, Ranatunga etc.our administrators are corrupt to the core.our administrators will take care of their interests well but not manage/nurture the talent base as u said.
 
West Indies should stop playing international cricket for good so that money hungry greedy players can play in franchise leagues throughout the year.
 
"West Indies handed a time penalty. Will have to have an extra fielder in for the rest of the innings."

Source: Cricinfo.
 
Mercurial Maxwell guides Australia to 4-0 series lead

Glenn Maxwell has produced an electrifying fielding display and six-hitting blitz to heap more misery on West Indies and take a 4-0 lead in with a three-wicket win in the fourth T20 international in St Kitts.

Australia have now won all seven matches (three Tests and four T20s) on their Caribbean tour as Josh Inglis hit a 28-ball half-century and Maxwell contributed 47 in 18 balls to overhaul West Indies 9-205 with four balls to spare.

Cameron Green continued his fine run at No.4 in Australia's T20 side with a third fifty in four innings this series, finishing unbeaten on 55 to guide the tourists to victory on the second ball of the final over as the heavens began to open again.

Aaron Hardie made the most of his recall with two wickets and 23 runs off 16 balls as Australia peeled off their second straight successful chase of a 200-plus target.

Maxwell had earlier added to his showreel of fielding exploits with two exceptional catches and an incredible assist on the boundary, before clearing Warner Park's postage stamp-sized boundary six times to power Australia's chase.

The result puts Australia on the cusp of their first clean sweep of an opponent in a five-match T20 series with another win in the series finale in St Kitts on Monday (9am Tuesday AEST).

West Indies lost wickets regularly after being asked to bat for the fourth time in four games this series but handy contributions from Sherfane Rutherford (31), Rovman Powell (28), Romario Shepherd (28) and Jason Holder (26) still enabled them to post more than 200 for the second consecutive match.

New ball pairing Xavier Bartlett and Hardie struck three times in the Powerplay in their first appearances of the series, the former removing Brandon King (18) in his first over before adding Shai Hope (10) – the centurion from the previous match – in his second.

Hope's dismissal gave Maxwell his first grab of the evening as he moved quickly to take the miscued lofted on drive inches above the turf rolling to his right.

The mercurial allrounder outdid that in Hardie's next over with a one-handed reverse cup facing away from the ball and reaching over his head to dismiss Roston Chase for a golden duck.

But his most spectacular catch of the innings he won't even get credit for, providing the assist to Green on the boundary as he again leaped in the air to pluck a powerful straight pull from Shepherd off Adam Zampa.

As his momentum carried him over the rope, Maxwell casually flicked the ball back to Green who had run around from long off to compete the catch and give Zampa (3-54) his second of three wickets.

Mitch Owen also took a superb diving catch low to the ground running in from deep third to send Shimron Hetmyer on his way for 16 from six balls in a significantly improved Australian fielding effort after spilling several chances as well as misfields that cost boundaries in the previous two matches.

Powell (1925) went past Chris Gayle (1899) into second on West Indies' all-time list of T20 international run-scorers behind Nicholas Pooran (2275) before the former skipper skied Hardie (2-24) to deep square leg.

Abbott took two wickets but found the going tougher in the fourth T20 after conceding less than six runs per over the night before, as he went at more than fifteens with his four overs costing him 61.

A third of those came in his third over of the evening, which included a no-ball that cost 11 runs after Shepherd sliced the initial delivery to the rope through backward point before launching the free hit for six over cover off the back foot.

Nathan Ellis (0-21) was at his miserly best, sending down a two-run final over – the most economical of the innings – either side of a 55-minute rain delay as the hosts finished on 9-205.

Mitch Marsh lasted just two balls when the chase finally began at 9.46pm as Jediah Blades captured his first T20 international wicket, but the Aussie skipper would have overturned the lbw adjudication if he opted to review as ball tracking replays later showed the ball pitching outside.

Red-hot No.3 Inglis found his groove with four consecutive boundaries in Romario Shepherd's first over as he raced to 28-ball half-century with 10 fours and a six.

But he picked out deep square leg with a powerful flick off the pads immediately after reaching the milestone to depart for 51 as Shepherd got his revenge when he returned for a second over.

Maxwell, opening again for the third game in a row, hit top gear after a pair of promising starts in the previous two matches, clubbing four sixes in a five balls stretch but fell three short of his half-century as he picked out long on off Akeal Hosein.

Owen, promoted to No.5 with Tim David rested following his record-breaking ton the previous evening, picked out deep point on two and Cooper Connolly fell for a duck two balls later as second-gamer Blades (3-29) lifted his side back into the contest.

But such hope proved short-lived as West Australians Green and Hardie put on 51 runs for the sixth-wicket to take the visitors to their ninth win in their past 10 T20Is against West Indies.
 
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