Can West Indies get their maroon stars back in the red-ball set-up?

Sammy has done it for the white-ball set-up by getting the likes of Russell, Lewis and Hetmyer to return

Cameron Ponsonby17-Nov-2024I watched the highlights of Brian Lara’s 153 not out against Australia earlier Saturday. It was great.A ram-packed Kensington Oval, The Prince being princely, Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh being comically bad at batting, a one-wicket win and a bloke doing backflips on the outfield as Lara is escorted off by security. Steve Waugh looks angry; Shane Warne has zinc on his nose. It’s the best.Wistful yearning for West Indies cricket of old is always dull and almost always preceded by a sigh that “they all play basketball these days”. Which no matter how often it is said, will still never be true.Related

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Even the ‘s match report from that day, 25 years ago, refers to the notion of cricket in the region being dead. Test cricket dying; the young being work shy; and the standard of refereeing being worse than ever. The three eternal truths of this world. Said by every generation in history.But cut to St Lucia – in a dead-rubber fourth of five T20Is. It’s a series where the integrity of the result has been corrupted by a shift in start times to better suit UK TV audiences that have made all seven games win toss, win match, events, with a touring side that is sub-strength because of a scheduling clash and it all played out to a backing track of in the land of dancehall, soca and reggae. Well, it was hard not to yearn. should never be played in the Caribbean. There is being welcoming. And there is pandering. If you are a local West Indian fan and you are going to watch a match that has been scheduled for an English fan’s TV experience and designed for an English fan’s in-ground experience. What, exactly, is left for you?

“It is so difficult for me to just say that I’ll go back into some red-ball cricket when the IPL is going on”Hetmyer, who last played for Guyana’s red-ball team in 2022, said in July

Of greatest frustration is that the yearning isn’t only of the past, but a failure to capture the present. Shai Hope, Nicholas Pooran and Shimron Hetmyer, all in the XI on Saturday, represent the mess of scheduling and proliferation of the franchise game.Hope boasts a non-Test first-class average of 51. It was reported that earlier this year he turned down the chance to return to Test cricket for the tour of Australia due to not having enough red-ball experience under his belt. Since his last Test in 2021, he has played just three first-class matches. One in 2022, where he scored a century for Barbados. And two in 2023 for Yorkshire, where he made two fifties in four innings.Pooran – who Hope described after the game as “the best T20 batter in the world” – was presented with a shirt pre-match to commemorate him becoming the most capped T20I player in West Indies’ history, overtaking Kieron Pollard. A self-described “son of franchise cricket”, Pooran has played 369 T20 matches and five first-class games. In 2022, he said playing Test cricket was still in his plans.