On Tuesday, cricket fans across the Caribbean witnessed a historic milestone at Antigua’s Sir Vivian Richards Cricket Stadium, as the West Indies sealed a landmark 1-0 Test series victory over Sri Lanka, with the second Test ending in a hard-fought draw. Following the final wicket, West Indies skipper Roston Chase opened up about what made the historic win possible, pointing to the team’s transformed batting consistency as the critical foundation for the result.
Breaking a 23-year drought against Sri Lanka in Test cricket, the result marks a significant turnaround for the side after a challenging 2023 campaign. Over the course of the series, West Indies batsmen delivered a dominant display with the willow, amassing a mammoth total of 1,234 runs across three innings. The standout innings included four centuries and three half-centuries, a far cry from the batting collapses that have plagued the regional side in recent matchups against Sri Lanka.
Opening batsman Amir Jangoo finished the series as the top run-scorer, notching 242 runs at an impressive average of 60.37, just edging out captain Chase himself, who accumulated 217 runs at an average of 59.61. For Chase, the win carries extra weight, as the side had struggled to overcome Sri Lanka for decades, both at home and on the road.
“I’m very elated, especially against a team like Sri Lanka that we have struggled to beat even at home and especially when we go away to them,” Chase said post-match. “So to come here and not just beat them but in a dominating kind of way when we haven’t won against them in 23 years, it feels great, especially after the year that we had last year.”
The all-rounder explained that deliberate, targeted work on batting improvement was a core focus of the team’s pre-series preparation, a strategy that paid dividends when it mattered most. For years, the West Indies has relied heavily on its bowling attack to deliver results, often leaving bowlers with underwhelming totals to defend. Chase pushed for a cultural shift ahead of the series, challenging batters to give their bowling unit competitive scores to work with.
“It was mostly the bowling that stood up for us in the majority of the games. It’s something that I really put forward to the guys, that we need to be able to at least give the bowlers something to work with. They raised their hands tremendously in this series,” Chase said. “These are big hundreds and not only that, we turned them into big totals as well. Not just one guy getting 100 and we (the team) probably just getting over 250. For two guys to get hundreds in two innings, that says a lot.”
Chase also expressed pride in his own standout performance as leader, crediting his teammates for the support that allowed him to lead from the front. “I mean this is the first series where I really had an outstanding performance. I’ve been trying but to go and actually lead from the front, so it feels great. I just wanna congratulate the guys for helping me to achieve this as the leader of the team,” he added.
The series’ standout performer, all-rounder Justin Greaves, who claimed both Man of the Match and Man of the Series honors, called the achievement the highlight of his professional career to date. “This will be top of the list. Contributing to a team win and then contributing to a series win as well, also the first series win in the test championship for us, so it’s a very big achievement,” Greaves said.
Greaves, who has now notched three Test centuries in his young career, with two of them coming at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, attributed his success at the venue to familiarity. He currently plays domestic cricket for the Leeward Islands, meaning he has spent hours batting on the stadium’s pitch, learning its idiosyncrasies. “It is home for me at the moment, playing for the Leewards, so I have gotten accustomed to the surface and it’s usually a pretty good one. Once you get in, you know, you could really add big scores,” he explained.
