KINGSTON, Jamaica – In a high-octane clash at Sabina Park, Australia clawed back from a shaky start to clinch a thrilling three-wicket win over the West Indies in the opening T20 International on Sunday, thanks to a blend of fierce pace bowling and fearless middle-order striking.
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Ben Dwarshuis, after being punished early, stormed back to snatch four crucial wickets. Meanwhile, Mitchell Owen and Cameron Green delivered blistering half-centuries to break Caribbean hearts and hand Australia a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.
West Indies blaze early, falter late
Asked to bat in front of a passionate Kingston crowd, the West Indies exploded out of the gates, with openers Brandon King and Shai Hope feasting on width and pace in the powerplay. King punished Dwarshuis with back-to-back boundaries in the opening over and added two more off Sean Abbott in the next. Hope joined the party, slapping Dwarshuis for consecutive fours as the Windies surged to 32 without loss in just three overs.
But the Aussies halted the carnage with the introduction of left-arm spinner Cooper Connolly, who outfoxed King (18) with a teasing delivery that led to a sharp stumping.
What followed was a dazzling display of counterattack from Roston Chase, who replaced the injured Evin Lewis. Initially watchful, Chase exploded with a flurry of strokes — smashing Connolly for four and six in quick succession, lofting Adam Zampa for six, and dismantling Abbott with four boundaries in a single over.
Chase brought up his third T20I half-century from just 25 deliveries and was looking imperious at 60 off 32 (9 fours, 2 sixes) before falling to Dwarshuis, caught at long-on.
Hope took charge afterward, launching Glenn Maxwell and Zampa for towering sixes en route to his seventh T20I fifty off 37 balls. But when Owen removed him for 55 (39 balls, 4 fours, 3 sixes), the innings fell apart.
From 152 for two at the 15-over mark, West Indies collapsed to 189 for eight — managing just 37 runs in the final five overs while losing six wickets. Dwarshuis was the destroyer-in-chief, claiming 4 for 36, including the key wickets of Andre Russell, Sherfane Rutherford, and Jason Holder.
Owen and Green rewrite the script
Chasing 190, Australia’s top order was rattled by sharp West Indian bowling, slipping to 78 for four by the ninth over. But then came a game-changing stand between Cameron Green and debutant Mitchell Owen — an 80-run blitzkrieg partnership off just 40 balls.
Owen signaled his intent with two thumping sixes off Russell in an 18-run over. He followed that up with three monstrous sixes off Akeal Hosein in an over that went for 20. Green joined the onslaught, smashing Holder for a four and six and reaching his half-century off just 25 balls.
Though Motie eventually dismissed Green for a superb 51 from 26 balls (5 sixes, 2 fours), the Australians were already in control, needing just 32 runs from 30 deliveries.
Owen completed a debut fifty off 26 balls with a towering six over midwicket but fell shortly after. Still, the damage was done.
Cool finish under pressure
In a fitting finale, Ben Dwarshuis returned not just with the ball but with the bat — steadying the chase alongside Abbott. The pair saw Australia over the line with seven balls to spare, sealing a memorable victory in a match that had swung wildly throughout.
The Windies bowling was spirited in patches — Gudakesh Motie stood out with 2 for 29, while Holder and Joseph claimed two wickets each — but the late momentum shift proved decisive.