
 
        
         
		West Indies’ Stafanie Taylor plays a shot against Australia during the fi nal of the ICC Women’s World Twenty20  
 2016 cricket tournament at Eden Gardens in Kolkata, India, Sunday, April 3, 2016.   Associated Press / Bikas Das, File 
 Windies Women suffer second whitewash 
 Barbadian tennis ace Darian King overworked 
 Caribbean L 50     ife, Sept. 27 - Oct.3, 2019 
 W.I. coach 
 Continued from Page 49  
 aim is to have a permanent head  
 coach in place for the away tour  
 against Afghanistan. 
 Floyd Reifer is currently in charge  
 of the men’s team on an interim  
 basis, having replaced another interim  
 coach, Richard  Pybus. 
 West  Indies  have  been  without  a  
 full-time coach since Australian Stuart  
 Law resigned last September. 
 Meanwhile  chairman  of  the  CWI  
 Selection  Task  Force,  Vice  President  
 Kishore  Shallow  said  the  recruitment  
 of a new selection panel has  
 also begun. 
 “We interviewed a few candidates  
 and  also  past  members  from  the  
 past  panel will  be  included  as well,”  
 he said. 
 He said after a four month process,  
 the Task Force, including Adams recommended  
 a new selection policy.  
 Shallow said in this new structure  
 the  captain  will  only  be  part  of  the  
 selection panel to pick the final playing  
 XI. 
 CWI  President,  Rickey  Skerritt  
 said  there is no system in the world  
 which includes the captain as a primary  
 selector. 
 The captain, he said, will have a  
 vote in picking the final XI from the  
 13 or 14 persons. 
 to finish ahead of the pack in a time  
 of 9.100. 
 He won gold by beating compatriot  
 Phillip Njisanel, also of T&T, in the  
 track cycling men’s sprint final at the  
 Pan American Games in Lima, Peru  
 on Aug. 3, 2019,  
 Both Barbados and St. Kitts had  
 good runs of victories until their losing  
 encounters last Sunday. 
 In previous encounters of the rounds  
 of  qualifiers,  Barbados  beat  Cuba  1-0,  
 then  went  on  to  spank  the  US  Virgin  
 Islands 5-0. 
 At the same time St. Kitts and Nevis  
 beat  Dominica  4-0,  and  created  an  
 upset by drawing 1-1 with the mighty  
 Jamaicans. 
 The defeated teams were eliminated.  
 Jamaica was knocked out because it had  
 also drawn 1-1 with Dominica and registered  
 no wins in that group. 
 Other teams that were eliminated in  
 the Caribbean Zone are Dominica, Grenada, 
  Cayman Islands, Puerto Rico, St  
 Lucia, and Antigua and Barbuda.  
 Guyana, Suriname, and Trinidad and  
 Tobago  withdrew  from  the  competition. 
 In spite of Barbados’ good run, the  
 Bajan Tridents had a warning that all  
 was not well with their team defences  
 when in a friendly encounter with St.  
 Kitts and Nevis on Sept. 15, they went  
 under 0-3. 
 St. Kitts and Nevis’ easy run over  
 Barbados  in  that  friendly  match,  also  
 did not prepare them for the strength  
 of the Dominican Republic. 
 Continued from Page 49  
 Trinidad and Tobago’s Nicholas  
 Paul celebrates after competing  
 in the cycling track sprint men’s  
 semifi nals heat 1 during the Pan  
 American Games in Lima, Peru,  
 Saturday, Aug. 3, 2019.     
 Associated Press / Silvia Izquierdo, fi le 
 Continued from Page 49  
 Haiti, DR teams qaualify for Olympic Championships 
 Trini cyclist  
 By Azad Ali 
 West  Indies  Women  suffered  
 their  second  straight  whitewash  at  
 the  hands  of  powerhouse  Australia  
 Women when they went down by nine  
 wickets  in  the  final  Twenty20  threematch  
 series at Kensington Oval, Barbados  
 last week. 
 Batting first, West Indies could only  
 muster a paltry 81 all out off their 20  
 overs,  with  opener  Britney  Cooper  
 top-scoring with 29 off 35 balls to be  
 one  of  just  three  batsmen  in  double  
 figures but only one to pass 20. 
 The hosts were undone by left-arm  
 spinner  Jess  Jonasen,  who  took  four  
 for  seven  from  four  overs,  while  20  
 year-old  leg-spinner  Georgia  Wareham  
 support with three for 14. 
 In  reply,  the  Aussies  strolled  to  
 their  target  in  the  eighth  over  of  
 the  match  with  Player-of-the-Match  
 Alyssa Healy belting  a  16-ball  38  and  
 opening partner, Beth Mooney gathering  
 an unbeaten 24 off 18 deliveries. 
 Healy struck six fours and two sixes  
 in dominating a 45-run opening stand  
 off 22 balls. 
 Captain  Stafanie  Taylor,  playing  in  
 her  l00th  T20  International  struggled  
 for  19  deliveries  in  making  6  
 runs  before  being  caught  out  in  the  
 seventh over.  
 By George Alleyne 
 A superhuman attempt by Barbados’  
 highest ranked tennis player, Darian  
 King, proved to be far from enough to  
 stop his country from falling to defeat to  
 Brazil in a Davis Cup 2019 fixture. 
 Playing in Criciuma, Brazil over the  
 weekend for a chance at qualification  
 into another round for the 2020 finals of  
 this world championship of tennis, King  
 took on the first match-up and beat 2019  
 Pan Am Games gold medallist, Joao De  
 Menezes, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 in two hours and  
 37 minutes. 
 But that was all for which the Barbados  
 two-man team had to cheer as Barbadian  
 Haydn Lewis lost to Thiago Monteiro 6-2,  
 6-2. Then King joined countryman, Lewis,  
 for the doubles match-up and they went  
 down  to  Brazilians,  Marcelo  Melo  and  
 Bruno Soares, 6-7, 5-7. 
 The Bajans reportedly fought valiantly  
 but this one-sided defeat was perhaps the  
 first sign of King taking on too much in  
 the name of country, as the man he had  
 beaten the day before was rested while he  
 had to face fresh Brazilian legs.  
 It also pointed to a need for at least two  
 other Barbadians in the team.  
 “Unlike the Barbadians, who had to  
 rely on their singles players from Friday, 
  in Saturday’s doubles rubber, Brazil  
 were able to field the experienced duo of  
 Melo and Soares,” the Davis Cup website  
 reported. 
 Following the doubles defeat in just  
 under an hour, King had only a half-hour  
 break before having to take to the court  
 again,  this  time  facing Thiago Monteiro  
 — who the Brazilians had rested from the  
 doubles - in another singles encounter.