'Windies had no petrol left in the tank' – Stuart Law
After putting up a stunning fightback against India in the second and third ODIs, the young Windies side slipped to massive defeats in the following two games, conceding the series 3-1 in the process.
That a young Windies side were able to give India a run for their money in their own conditions spoke volumes of their skills. They managed a thrilling tie in a chase of 321 in the second match and then went on to win the third by 43 runs, but the drastic dip in performances that followed betrayed fitness issues, according to coach Law.
India seal the series in style!
— ICC (@ICC) November 1, 2018
Rohit Sharma's 56-ball 63* helps India finish it in a hurry as they gun down 105 inside 15 overs.#INDvWI SCORE ➡️ https://t.co/JVGV9qROfj pic.twitter.com/80jM8l793Q
"In Pune and Vizag, we had great games of cricket. Those two games took a lot out of us and in the last two games, we had no petrol left in the tank," he said.
"That is what we need to address. We have tried to address our fitness and strength areas but we still have a long way to go. Coming here and playing against one of the best teams in the world, it is about battling conditions. If you are not conditioned or not fit enough, you have to battle even harder as we found out in the last two games."
"This team is learning all the time. There is no better team to watch (than India). It is not a skill thing. It is about choosing the right option at the right time. If we can do that as you saw in game two and game three, we can play very good cricket. It is just a matter of bracing through those situations."
One other big area of concern that emerged for Windies through the course of the series was the under-performances of the openers, Kieran Powell and Chandrapaul Hemraj. Powell scored just 94 runs from five innings, while Hemraj scored just 70 from four innings before being dropped for the final game. The coach agreed that it was an opportunity missed for them, but insisted they might yet have some more chances to prove themselves and make a case for being on the squad for the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup 2019.
"For the players that we did bring in, it was an opportunity. The guys who got the opportunity at the top of the order, I think it is an opportunity missed," Law said at the end of the series. "I'm not saying there isn't another opportunity, there are three games in Bangladesh in a couple of weeks' time. But I would have thought that playing here in India, on some of the batting paradises that we have seen, there could have been a few more runs scored by the two at the top."
Law admitted that it would have been ideal for the Windies to identify all World Cup candidates by this time, but there remain issues to fix.
'They're a world-class team. I love the way they go about planning' – #Windies fielding coach Nic Pothas says his side can learn a lot from #India
— ICC (@ICC) November 1, 2018
➡️ https://t.co/qpYy0JwJNU pic.twitter.com/mR9sZXa4UR
"We are still looking to fill holes. We were hopeful that we will leave India and Bangladesh knowing pretty much the squad that we are going to take to the World Cup, which would have been pretty much the same squad we were going to play against England in January and February. We still have to find a few players, so there are still opportunities for players to stake a claim," said Law, who will leave the job with the Windies after the series in Bangladesh for a stint with Middlesex.
"They have a lot of skill, every single one of them. But it is temperament or making decision under pressure ... once you walk out there, with 40,000 people screaming against one of the best teams playing cricket, pressure does funny things. It is about living it, it's very easy to sit down and talk about it, you still don't understand what that pressure is. You have to go out there and live it."