Richie Richardson Tells West Indies Not to get Deflated Against Australia
Richie Richardson has urged West Indies to show some character as they embark on a tough tour to Australia, where they have not won since 1997.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: December 01, 2015 02:46 pm IST
Richie Richardson Tuesday the maligned West Indian tourists to back themselves and take on Australia in the coming three-Test series. (Sunil Narine Gets ICC Ban for Illegal Action)
The Windies are a pale imitation of their glory days a quarter of a century ago and have been largely written off by the pundits as they embark on their tour of Australia. (Pattinson, Coulter-Nile Included in Australia Test Squad for West Indies Series)
The West Indies, who have a four-day warm-up game against a Cricket Australia XI starting in Brisbane on Wednesday, last won a Test in Australia in 1997 and last won a series Down Under in 1992-93.
But Richardson, the Windies team manager, called on his young and inexperienced touring team to believe they can upset Steve Smith's Australians on their own pitches.
The second-ranked Australians are expected to be too strong for the eighth-rated West Indies in the three-Test series, starting in Hobart on December 10.
"I really don't see question marks and I hope the players aren't thinking that way either because that is negative," Richardson told reporters.
"We have to back ourselves and look to win. We have a young team we are moulding.
"Our players will be looking to establish themselves and gain as much experience as possible."
Richardson said he has been trying to gain some self-belief in the West Indies team, skippered by young paceman Jason Holder.
"When I played the game I never underestimated anyone," he said.
"On any given day you can get the better of somebody, but you have to back yourselves.
"That's how I played the game and that's how I talk to the players. You have to believe you can conquer.
"If you do that you start to gain respect, you start to find yourself being on the same level as them and probably going past them."
Richardson, 53, was one of the West Indies' greatest batsmen, scoring 16 centuries in 86 Tests at 44.39 before his retirement in 1995.