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West Indies confident of record chase

da marjack bet: The West Indian camp sounded confident ahead of the final day’s play at Old Trafford.

Cricinfo staff11-Jun-2007

Shivnarine Chanderpaul will be hoping to steer the West Indies to victory. © Getty Images
The West Indian camp sounded confident of a win ahead of the final day ofthe Test at Old Trafford, needing 154 runs with five wickets remaining tocomplete the highest fourth innings run-chase in the history of Testcricket.”I think we’re in it,” said David Moore, the West Indies coach. “They [England] have only taken two wickets in the last two sessions [on day four]. We batted very well and we’ve got twoquality batsmen in at the moment.” Moore hoped that Denesh Ramdin and Shivnarine Chanderpaul could keep batting for as long as possible to get West Indies as close to the target and then leave it up to Darren Sammy and the tail.Daren Ganga, captain of the West Indies, also sounded pleased with the day’sproceedings. “This has been a very good day,” he said. “The mere fact that we onlylost our wickets today was definitely a positive for us.” Ganga felt hisbatsmen had stuck to the task in the uphill battle to chase a score ofover 400. “Shivnarine Chanderpaul led the way with his knock and all theother guys supported. Runako Morton laid that foundation, Dwayne Bravo andDenesh Ramdin all contributed.”Looking ahead to the final day’s play, an optimistic Ganga said, “The gamewould be over probably in two sessions. If we can bat for two sessions Iam sure we will win the Test match.”Shivnarine Chanderpaul, unbeaten on 81, is the man on whom West Indianhopes will be pinned on to finish the job. Talking about the approach ofthe batsmen on day four, Chanderpaul said, “We were looking forpartnerships and to take it session by session and that was how webasically approached it.” When asked about the approach for the final day,he added, “We will go out and continue doing the same thing and look tobat out the first two sessions. If we do that we will be close to winningthe game.”Moore justified the confidence in Chanderpaul by saying he was a classic Test batsman as he loved batting with his back against the wall. “He is underrated and underestimated and people do that at their own peril, Chanderpaul is a world-class cricketer.”Moore felt the West Indian lower-order could provide able support toChanderpaul. “Sammy is very gutsy as you can see with theball, he’s very passionate and certainly he has the ability to supportShiv. We’re looking forward for 9, 10 and 11 to contribute if they have tobut we’re looking forward to knock it off before that.”Expressing his view about chasing the record, Moore said, “It would befantastic if we can do it. In retrospect if we had scored more runs in thefirst innings and batted a little longer we would have been a lot closerthan we are already so we’ve got those things to contemplate later on butat the moment we certainly looking to chase down the target.”Incidentally, West Indies hold the current record for the highestfourth-innings total to win a Test, having scored 418 for 7 against Australiain 2003 at St John’s, Antigua. Chanderpaul had scored a century in that match as well.