'We just need to get that start and kick on' - Chase waits for change to come for WI
"Obviously we are down right now but it has to change at some point, and the change can start from now," Roston Chase says
ESPNcricinfo staff
09-Oct-2025 • 9 hrs ago
Away in the Caribbean, Cricket West Indies has got the best minds in the game in the region to chalk out a way out of the abyss - call it 27 all out if you will - the national team has fallen in, at a time when there is talk of the World Test Championship being split into two tiers. Roston Chase, the Test captain, is aware of all this and is hoping for " that start and to then kick on from there" when they face India for the second and last time in the ongoing series in Delhi.
"Obviously we are down right now but it has to change at some point, and the change can start from now," Chase said a day away from the start of the second Test, where West Indies would be hoping to bounce back after an innings defeat in the first Test. "But it starts with the belief and the mindset of each and every player, and just keep motivating the guys that we can still play some positive cricket."
In Ahmedabad, in the first Test of the series, West Indies put up 162 and 146. They had two individual scores in the 30s - Justin Greaves in the first innings and Alick Athanaze in the second. Their best partnership was worth 46, in 87 balls, in the second innings between Greaves and Athanaze. Not good enough, especially when the opposition has three century-makers in their only innings and have declared on 448 for 5.
"I don't think the guys are lacking confidence. But it's just to get that one score, to get that start and to then kick on from there," Chase said. "It just takes one... get that good innings or that hundred or that big fifty, that then gives you the confidence to actually think 'I can do it'.
"I think everyone is confident, but when we get out there, we didn't start well as a batting unit and the pressure is on, and it's for us to soak up that pressure as batters, and still find a way to score, put pressure back on to the Indian bowlers. That is the biggest challenge for us. We just need to get that start and kick on. And we'll be fine."
Chase's own Test career has been an intriguing one. He has now played 53 Tests, but has an average of 25.57. To go with a bowling average of 46.25. He scored a century in just his second Test, against India in Kingston in July 2016, and then had two more centuries by his tenth Test. In the 43 since, he has scored just two more, and none at all in his last 24, where he has crossed 50 only four times.
"I can't really speak for anyone [else], but for myself, I just think it's a matter of confidence and continuously playing quality first-class cricket and so on. Just that knowhow and facing good attacks for longer periods, and obviously, trying to improve on faults you may have picked up early on in your career," Chase said. "Obviously, when you first start, no one really knows you, and then, obviously, [you] play a couple of games and people see your weaknesses and try to exploit them. So it's for the players to just improve on those weaknesses from as early as possible. That's it.
Roston Chase hasn't scored a century in his last 24 Tests•Associated Press
"It's just digging deep for those four sessions and trying to stay in the now and not what has happened before in terms of the ball before or the over before. Just staying in the present is the biggest challenge for me right now. That's something I have to go with."
Chase has played franchise T20 leagues in the past, in the ILT20, the Bangladesh Premier League, the Global T20 Canada, apart from the CPL, of course. While he is still a CPL player for St Lucia Kings, he wants to commit his future to West Indies, and to Test cricket.
"It was always my dream to play for West Indies. I had a chance to play franchise cricket and I still have opportunities to play franchise cricket. But I have given that up," he said. "So I cannot say that I am not hungry or not hungry, because this is what I wanted to do. I gave up my chance to play franchise cricket and I have taken up the captaincy role [in Tests], which is a big step.
"So that just goes to show that I want to be here. I want to play for the Maroon. And I have always given my all for the Maroon."