Ruthlessness lacking in India's win
Although India won the series quite comfortably in the end, there will be concerns about the back-up batting strength and the inability to force results

Ishant Sharma was the top wicket-taker with 22 wickets in three Tests • Associated Press
After a terrible start to their campaign in the West Indies when they collapsed to 85 for 6 in the first Test in Jamaica, India recovered to post a competitive first-innings total of 246 and went on to win the Test comfortably by 63 runs. In the second Test on a difficult track in Barbados, India once again played themselves into a winning position only to be denied this time by a combination of the fickle weather and gutsy batting by the West Indian middle-order batsmen.
Team | Runs/Wicket | Scoring rate | 100/50 | Wickets taken | 5WI/10WM |
India | 28.75 | 3.02 | 1/10 | 57 | 2/1 |
West Indies | 23.73 | 2.76 | 2/5 | 49 | 2/0 |
Both teams struggled on the batting front and failed to forge substantial partnerships on a consistent basis. India's opening pair had a disastrous time and aggregated only 55 runs in six innings. M Vijay, in particular, had a very poor run scoring only 72 runs at an average of 12. West Indies, who missed Chris Gayle's aggression at the top of the order, also had a tough time. Lendl Simmons, who had performed well against Pakistan in the previous series, scored just 46 runs in four innings in the first two Tests.
Team | 1st wicket | 2nd wicket | 3rd wicket | 4th wicket | 5th wicket | 6th wicket | 7th wicket |
India | 55, 9.16, 0/0 | 219, 36.50, 0/3 | 241, 40.16, 0/2 | 186, 37.20, 0/2 | 198, 39.60, 1/0 | 141, 28.20, 1/0 | 228, 57.00, 1/0 |
West Indies | 126, 21.00, 0/1 | 38, 6.33, 0/0 | 167, 27.83, 0/1 | 359, 59.83, 1/2 | 50, 8.33, 0/0 | 273, 45.50, 0/3 | 115, 19.16, 0/0 |
On tracks suited for pace bowling, fast bowlers from both sides had an excellent time. India proved to be the better bowling side on both the pace and spin fronts. Both Indian fast bowlers and spinners had a better average and strike rate compared to their West Indian counterparts.
Team | Bowler type | Wickets | Average | Economy | SR | 5WI/10WM |
West Indies | pace | 36 | 25.38 | 2.77 | 54.9 | 2/0 |
India | pace | 38 | 21.78 | 2.70 | 48.2 | 2/1 |
West Indies | spin | 13 | 34.46 | 3.27 | 63.1 | 0/0 |
India | spin | 18 | 25.83 | 2.53 | 61.2 | 0/0 |
Vijay, who had a very ordinary series, found the going toughest against Ravi Rampaul. Rampaul picked up Vijay's wicket five times in five innings while conceding just 27 runs. The West Indian opening pair of Adrian Barath and Simmons also struggled against Ishant and Praveen. Edwards had a great deal of success against MS Dhoni and Kohli dismissing them three times each. Harbhajan had the better of Carlton Baugh dismissing the wicketkeeper-batsman four times in six innings. Sarwan, who had a wretched series, was dismissed three times in four innings by Ishant, and managed just 11 runs at an average of 3.66 against the fast bowler.
Bowler/Batsman | Innings | Dismissals | Average | Scoring rate |
Ravi Rampaul/M Vijay | 5 | 5 | 5.40 | 2.16 |
Carlton Baugh/Harbhajan Singh | 6 | 4 | 10.50 | 3.36 |
Adrian Barath/Praveen Kumar | 6 | 3 | 16.33 | 2.31 |
Adrian Barath/Ishant Sharma | 6 | 3 | 16.00 | 3.06 |
MS Dhoni/Fidel Edwards | 4 | 3 | 10.33 | 3.32 |
Virat Kohli/Fidel Edwards | 4 | 3 | 7.00 | 2.25 |
Ramnaresh Sarwan/Ishant Sharma | 4 | 3 | 3.66 | 2.53 |
Lendl Simmons/Ishant Sharma | 4 | 3 | 8.66 | 4.33 |
Dhoni, who took over as captain in 2008, is yet to lose a Test series as captain. West Indies hold the record for the most consecutive series without defeat (29) while India under MS Dhoni are joint-sixth on the list (11 series undefeated). Dhoni now has five wins out of 12 away Tests which puts him joint-second with Dravid on the list of Indian captains with the most away-Test wins. Sourav Ganguly, who is on top with 11 overseas victories, has a win-loss ratio of 1.10 while Dhoni has a much better win-loss ratio of 2.50. Among captains who have led in at least 25 Tests, Dhoni has the best win-loss ratio (5.00) followed by Steve Waugh (4.55) and Mike Brearley (4.50). As in the case of the third Test, India have struggled to close out matches, and as a result, their draw-percentage under Dhoni (33.33) is among the highest. In contrast, Waugh and Ponting have the lowest draw-percentages (12.28 and 16.88 respectively).
Captain | Matches | Overall Wins/Losses | Wins/Losses (home) | Wins/losses(away) | Overall W/L ratio | Overall draw % |
MS Dhoni | 27 | 15/3 | 10/1 | 5/2 | 5.00 | 33.33 |
Steve Waugh | 57 | 41/9 | 22/2 | 19/7 | 4.55 | 12.28 |
Mike Brearley | 31 | 18/4 | 12/0 | 6/4 | 4.50 | 29.03 |
Andrew Strauss | 35 | 17/5 | 13/2 | 4/3 | 3.40 | 37.14 |
Viv Richards | 50 | 27/8 | 15/2 | 12/6 | 3.37 | 30.00 |
Richie Benaud | 28 | 12/4 | 7/2 | 5/2 | 3.00 | 39.28 |
Ian Chappell | 30 | 15/5 | 9/2 | 6/3 | 3.00 | 33.33 |
Clive Lloyd | 74 | 36/12 | 13/2 | 23/10 | 3.00 | 35.13 |
Ricky Ponting | 77 | 48/16 | 29/5 | 19/11 | 3.00 | 16.88 |