West Indies began their ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 campaign with a 35-run win over Scotland in Kolkata and will be eager to continue their winning momentum against England tomorrow. West Indies legend Ian Bishop and former Australia cricketer Mel Jones shared their thoughts on the two-time champions’ recent form and the challenges they face in the tournament.
Ian Bishop elaborated on the West Indies’ team balance and chances in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026:
“The West Indies are missing key pieces, particularly a wrist spinner. We haven’t found one and given him enough experience yet. A couple of the guys at the top, their batting isn’t as consistent as it should be, but they’ve got power. They’ve got some young fast bowlers. If they’re fit, Jayden Seales is getting slightly better, but they are still not where I think they should have been after the last T20 World Cup in the Caribbean in 2024. They did better. I thought they could have gone further, so I still don’t know where to place them. The talent is there. It’s whether they can bring it all together.”
On the workload of West Indies’ Head Coach Daren Sammy and white-ball Captain Shai Hope:
“I think for the West Indies, there are a couple of things. They have Daren Sammy as Coach across all formats. Shai Hope now plays all formats, so the energy they are expending and the planning that has to be done, while they are concentrating on Test cricket and 50-over cricket to qualify for the next World Cup, means their backroom staff have to be broad-minded enough to also plan for T20s and alleviate that workload from Shai Hope and, to some extent, from Daren Sammy.”
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Mel Jones spoke about the West Indies’ preparation leading into the tournament:
“Yeah, 100 per cent, the players can draw from their IPL experience. But the difficulty is that you can’t just rely on those couple of players who have had that experience. They played New Zealand and South Africa, two very good oppositions, but in conditions that do not mimic what they are going to come up against in the subcontinent. How do you then start to put into play all your game plans, all the role-playing and all those sorts of things, to get ready for the World Cup in the subcontinent when you’re not in the subcontinent? That’s the planning piece that I think they may have just missed a beat on there. Could they have got over here and been involved in a tri-nation series, or done something along those lines, so that the players who have played IPL can start disseminating that experience and knowledge to other players in the squad?”