Carlos Brathwaite Hails India's Batting Line-up Ahead of Test Series
Carlos Brathwaite has said that patience will be a key in the coming series, keeping in mind that India have a better batting line-up. West Indies have not won a Test match against India in the last 14 years
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: July 15, 2016 04:40 pm IST
Highlights
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India's batting line-up one of the world's best, says Carlos Brathwaite
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The West Indies star has said his team will have to be patient vs India
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Brathwaite has also said that West Indies have improved in recent times
West Indies all-rounder Carlos Brathwaite says India have a formidable batting line-up and the contest will be equally tough against the Indian spinners when the four-Test series begins at Antigua on July 21.
"Their batting line-up is undoubtedly one of the stronger batting line-ups in the world, home and away, and unfortunately or fortunately for us, it is a lot similar to India in the Caribbean," Brathwaite was quoted as saying by the WICB website.
Brathwaite pointed out that the Caribbean side had made small strides in their last Test series against Australia and now needs to continue that upward progression in this series. However, he feels that the West Indies pitches are a bit slower and requires a different attack.
"India attacks with spin while the Aussies attack with pace and it's about us now being a little more patient. Spin has supposedly been our downfall for the last couple series or years and I think we have gotten better.
"The coach (Phil Simmons) has done a very good job getting some of the batters in off-season and focusing on playing spin really well," the 27-year-old said.
Brathwaite feels that patience will be a key in the coming series keeping in mind that India have a better batting line-up. West Indies have not won a Test match against India in 14 years and have lost eight of their last 15 encounters and drawn seven.
"It's about us being patient as a team, patient as a bowling unit and as individuals not getting frustrating. We are up against one of the better batting units and you have to do what you have been doing in first class cricket over a long period of time," said Brathwaite, who made his Test debut against Australia last year.
"It's just a matter of us having a few options to each delivery, being patient and ultimately, playing the waiting game. I think whoever plays the patient game better will come out on top in the series."