Antigua: In a similar fashion to 2018, the West Indies must go through the Qualifier for a 2023 Cricket World Cup ticket.
Just like their last Qualifier campaign, the boys from the Caribbean are tipped not to have everything go their way in Zimbabwe, though should be confident as one of the top teams at the event.
This confidence comes in abundance for all-rounder Keemo Paul, back in the squad to ensure their campaign ends in success.
The 25-year-old comes off two solid outings against the UAE in his return to ODI cricket, and hopes to flourish in Zimbabwe given the opportunity, all while channelling the challenge of the game at the elite level and the experience of over 50 international appearances under his belt, the ICC reported.
“I've been out for a while and to come back, I'm just really excited to play some cricket and to perform back amongst my friends, people that I call my second family,” the right-arm quick said.
“I've always been a hard worker, but I would say I've had to dial in more on specifics and get mentally tough to get back here.
“It was just about speaking to the right people, getting the right motivation, and also motivating myself.”
Paul joins a squad boasting match-winners up and down the list despite the absence of Shimron Hetmyer and others, and the side are led by a new coach in two-time T20 World Cup-winning captain Daren Sammy.
Sammy's first assignment in UAE showed promising sides for the West Indies ahead, and Paul believes the new coach can evoke the best out of the squad trying to find its cricketing identity.
“It's really good to have a legend like Daren Sammy around, he has a very calm demeanour. He is a very cool guy.
“The players feel really, really good and really, really comfortable. He also brings a lot of energy and motivation to the camp.”
Shai Hope leads the side and will prove to be the rock of the batting line-up, on top of keeping wicket. Jason Holder and Nicholas Pooran join Hope as key players, though the group boasts several match winners such as Kyle Mayers, Roston Chase, Brandon King and Alzarri Joseph.
Paul wants to join those names and deliver for his side, and hints a supreme individual effort may come at the Qualifier.
“I definitely think I'm a match winner, I always try to be positive, I always try to be my own hype man.
“I'm at a stage now in my career, where I need to do better and where I need to actually stand up as a match-winner and put in those performances.
“Every game, I go there with that mentality now to be a match-winner, so, I think it is going to come very, very soon.”
The West Indies open their qualifying campaign against regional rivals United States, their first-ever ODI against them. They then face the in-form Nepal, Zimbabwe and the Netherlands in the group stages as they strive for a strong Super Six position with points carried over.
While Paul doesn't treat cricket as a zero-sum game in terms of gauging success, the all-rounder feels the team are good enough to do the job with ease.
“I wouldn't say not qualifying would be a failure, but I wouldn't look down that road because I think we'll definitely qualify,” he confessed.
“In life, I don't see anything as a failure. It's all about learning and moving forward.
“I'm pretty confident and that's the mood in the camp. We're up for it, so I definitely think that we will qualify.”
Despite glimpses of quality in their Cricket World Cup Super League campaign, the West Indies finished outside the top eight spots for automatic qualification, 10 points adrift of the qualifying South Africa.
The West Indies were one of the two Cricket World Cup Qualifiers for the 2019 tournament, alongside Afghanistan.
Squad:
Shai Hope (c), Rovman Powell (vc), Shamarh Brooks, Yannic Cariah, Keacy Carty, Johnson Charles, Roston Chase, Jason Holder, Akeal Hosein, Alzarri Joseph, Brandon King, Kyle Mayers, Keemo Paul, Nicholas Pooran, Romario Shepherd. (UNI)