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Simmons: Right West Indies team, wrong shot selection - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

WEST INDIES coach Phil Simmons blamed poor shot selection for the team’s dismal batting performance against England in their opening International Cricket Council T20 World Cup on Saturday but believes the squad can bounce back against South Africa on Tuesday.

England thrashed West Indies by six wickets with 70 balls to spare as they dismissed the Caribbean team for a paltry 55 runs and, in reply, cruised to 56/4 in 8.2 overs.

A shabby opening display by the defending champions saw the team’s most publicly-criticised selection, Chris Gayle, topscore with 13 runs.

“It was just about bad shot selection. The (England) bowling wasn’t as extraordinary. All the guys have played against these guys before so I just put it down to bad shot selection. We need to improve that ten-fold by the time we get to Tuesday,” said Simmons, during a zoom media conference on Sunday.

The coach added that the team did not assess the game accurately and were unable to recover owing to a continuous fall of wickets.

After the powerplay, West Indies were reeling at 31/4 having lost openers Evin Lewis (three) and Lendl Simmons (six), followed by Shimron Hetmyer (nine) and Gayle, who was the only batsman to get into double figures.

[caption id="attachment_920740" align="alignnone" width="1024"] West Indies' players (left-right) Nicholas Pooran, Ravi Rampaul, Akeal Hosein and Lendl Simmons celebrate the dismissal of England's Jason Roy (not pictured) during the ICC Twenty20 World Cup match between England and West Indies at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium in Dubai, UAE on Saturday. (AFP PHOTO) -[/caption]

Wickets continued to crumble as the experienced Dwayne Bravo and Nicholas Pooran were each dismissed for six, while skipper Kieron Pollard made five and Andre Russell a second-ball duck.

English leg-spinner Adil Rashid was the pick of the bowlers as he bagged a mesmerising four wickets from just 2.2 overs. Moeen Ali and Tymal Mills also took two wickets for 17 runs from their four overs each.

On the batting collapse, Simmons mentioned, “The game plan is there and everyone understands it. After losing a couple wickets we needed to regroup and we just kept losing wickets. We didn’t assess the sessions when we lost wickets.”

In defence of 55, West Indies showed some fight with the ball and in the field as they were still able to snag four English scalps.

World Cup debutant Akeal Hosein (2/24) took two stellar catches off his own bowling to remove Jonny Bairstow (nine) and Liam Livingstone (one).

Simmons, a former Trinidad and Tobago and WI all-rounder, credited Hosein’s start to the competition dubbing it “heartening”. However, although ruing the team’s devastating loss, he believes the maroon has enough experience to assess challenging situations, adapt and play accordingly.

Looking ahead at Tuesday’s meeting with the Proteas, which bowls off at 6 am (TT time), Simmons is optimistic that the team has the both the depth and tenacity to rebou

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