West Indian cricket team in Australia in 2009–10
The Frank Worrell Trophy 2009–10 | |||||
Australia | West Indies | ||||
Dates | 18 November 2009 – 23 February 2010 | ||||
Captains | Ricky Ponting (Tests and ODIs) Michael Clarke (Twenty20s) |
Chris Gayle | |||
Test series | |||||
Result | Australia won the 3-match series 2–0 | ||||
Most runs | Simon Katich (302) Shane Watson (263) Michael Hussey (235) |
Chris Gayle (346) Brendan Nash (250) Dwayne Bravo (176) | |||
Most wickets | Mitchell Johnson (17) Doug Bollinger (13) Nathan Hauritz (11) |
Sulieman Benn (11) Dwayne Bravo (11) Kemar Roach (7) | |||
Player of the series | Chris Gayle (WI) | ||||
One Day International series | |||||
Result | Australia won the 5-match series 4–0 | ||||
Most runs | Ricky Ponting (295) Shane Watson (189) |
Kieron Pollard (170) Dwayne Smith (130) | |||
Most wickets | Doug Bollinger (11) Ryan Harris (7) |
Ravi Rampaul (9) Kieron Pollard (7) | |||
Player of the series | Ricky Ponting (Aus) | ||||
Twenty20 International series | |||||
Result | Australia won the 2-match series 2–0 | ||||
Most runs | David Warner (116) Shane Watson (99) |
Denesh Ramdin (53) Runako Morton (40) | |||
Most wickets | Shaun Tait (4) Dirk Nannes (3) |
Nikita Miller (4) Chris Gayle (2) |
The West Indies cricket team toured Australia, in the Frank Worrell Trophy for a 3-match Test series, a 5-match ODI series, and 2 Twenty20 Internationals from 18 November 2009 to 23 February 2010.[1] Australia remained unbeaten throughout the summer, winning the test series 2–0, ODI series 4–0 and the Twenty20 series 2–0 besides completing a clean sweep of Pakistan earlier in January. Hence the Australians fulfilled their dreams of having an unbeaten summer. Since the introduction of ODIs in the 1970s, they had only one other summer – 2000–01 – when they didn't lose a match.
Squads
Tour matches
First-class match: Queensland v West Indians – 18–21 November
18 – 21 November Scorecard |
West Indians |
v |
|
- West Indians won the toss and elected to bat.
- Luke Feldman and Alister McDermott (Queensland) both made their first-class debuts.
1-day tour match: Prime Minister's XI v West Indians – 4 February
4 February 2010 Scorecard |
West Indians 399/5 (45 overs) |
v |
Prime Minister's XI 312/7 (45 overs) |
- Prime Minister's XI won the toss and elected to field.
- Rain initially reduced the game to 48 overs. Further rain cut the West Indies innings short by 3 overs, with the (D/L method) giving the Prime Minister's XI a revised target of 403 from 45 overs.
Test series
1st Test
2nd Test
4 – 8 December Scorecard |
West Indies |
v |
|
3rd Test
ODI series
1st ODI
7 February 2010 Scorecard |
v |
West Indies 143 (34.2 overs) | |
- West Indies won the toss and elected to field.
2nd ODI
9 February 2010 Scorecard |
West Indies 170 (39.4 overs) |
v |
|
- West Indies won the toss and elected to bat
3rd ODI
12 February 2010 Scorecard |
v |
West Indies 6/0 (1.0 overs) | |
|
- West Indies won the toss and elected to field.
- Rain delayed the West Indies innings which was then abandoned at the end of the first over.
4th ODI
14 February 2010 Scorecard |
v |
West Indies 274/8 (50 overs) | |
- West Indies won the toss and elected to field.
5th ODI
Twenty20 International Series
1st T20I
21 February 2010 Scorecard |
v |
West Indies 141/8 (20 overs) | |
- Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
- Narsingh Deonarine made his T20I debut for West Indies.
2nd T20I
23 February 2010 Scorecard |
West Indies 138/7 (20 overs) |
v |
|
- West Indies won the toss and elected to bat
Media coverage
- Sky Sports (live) (HD) – United Kingdom and Ireland
- Star Cricket (live) – India
- Fox Sports (live) (HD) – Australia
- SKY Sport (live) (HD) – New Zealand
- Geo Super (live) – Pakistan
- Supersport (live) – South Africa
- Nine Network (live) – Australia
- Caribbean Media Corporation (live) – Caribbean countries
- Eurosport (live) – Europe
- DirecTV (live) – USA
References
- ↑ "West Indies tour of Australia 2009/10 – Fixtures". Cricinfo. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
- ↑ "West Indies name tour squad for Australia". Herald Sun. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
- ↑ "Mark Benson - the umpire who made history - calls time on career". ESPNcricinfo. 20 January 2016. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
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