West Indies, the winners of the 1975 and 1979 World Cup, have announced their 30-men preliminary squad for the ICC World Cup 2015. Fast bowler Ravi Rampaul has been left out of the squad. West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) haven’t given any
West Indies batting legend and one of the most respected cricketer Brian Lara says that West Indies are lacking team unity at the moment and this could cost them the World Cup. West Indies cricket came under a huge crisis when the
Cricket South Africa (CSA) have named 14-member squad for the three-match Test series against West Indies that gets under-way on December 17th. The squad features the regular names that have been a part of the team from quite a long-time. JP Duminy has
Caribbean pace bowler Sheldon Cottrell is prepared to continue his international career after a hamstring injury which enforced him out of action for near about six weeks. Sheldon Cottrell has been chosen in the West Indies team’s Test squad for next month’s tour of
After an ill-fated tour of India last month during which a dispute between players and the WICB (now the dispute has been resolved) led to the tour being abandoned, the West Indies selectors have named a full strength squad for the three match
Earlier it had emerged that the West Indies Cricket Board had decided to sack all the three captains from their respective positions- Dinesh Ramdin, the Test Captain, Dwayne Bravo, the ODI Captain, and Darren Sammy, the T20 skipper. However, Dwayne Bravo has
The West Indies who abruptly pulled out of the Indian Tour from midway are likely to go to the tour of South Africa, as reports from the Caribbean suggest a meeting took place to solve the contracts dispute was successful. The West Indies
Caribbean newspapers have reported that tensions between the WICB and the West Indies players have eased, following meetings over the weekend. That would mean West Indies’ scheduled tour to South Africa in December will go ahead without any hurdles. According to the
The Royal Gazette, published from Bermuda, is running a story which is perhaps the most realistically defined statement on the controversial mid-way pull-out by West Indian players from India. Philip Hackett, the Caribbean sports journalist and commentator, has expressed his anger over
Wally Edwards, the chairman of ICC’s executive committee, is optimistic that ICC’s newly-found sense of purpose will help resolve the West Indies issue. Edwards, who acknowledged that the BCCI were “extremely disappointed, as we would be, if a team just leaves when