Pakistan and West Indies look to break out of their ODI funk
Hosts face a tricky path to 2027 ODI World Cup while Pakistan will bank on their returning big names to fire
Danyal Rasool
07-Aug-2025 • 22 hrs ago

West Indies are currently ranked tenth in ODI cricket • ICC/Getty Images
So, this is the series that might not have happened. The PCB didn't try too hard to conceal their displeasure at being dragged out to Trinidad to play out a three-match ODI series after T20Is in Florida; an additional few short-form games in the US would have suited them just fine. Their opposite number felt a tour of the West Indies ought to at least include setting foot in the West Indies, and that once Pakistan made it there, they might as well play the 50-over games the two had mutually agreed upon.
And West Indies really do think it's about time people stopped trying to keep them from playing ODI cricket. They missed out on the two most recent ICC tournaments in the format, qualification defeat in 2023 locking them out of both that year's World Cup and this year's Champions Trophy. Three games apiece against Ireland and England comprise the sum total of ODIs West Indies have played in 2025, with just one win to show for it.
West Indies need to turn that around quickly if they're to avoid missing a third successive 50-over ICC event. They are ranked 10th, with qualification for 2027 only guaranteed to the top eight teams aside from hosts South Africa and Zimbabwe; with Zimbabwe well outside the top eight, West Indies realistically need to finish within the top nine - one place higher than they are - to secure automatic passage at the cut-off date. A series win against Pakistan, ranked six places above them, would help significantly.
Pakistan may be favourites for this series, but you wouldn't know it from their recent ODI form. Their win-loss record this year is worse than the hosts, their solitary win sandwiched between seven defeats. It included an ignominious tournament as hosts of the Champions Trophy, where they were knocked out within the first five days, and exited without winning a game at the bottom of their group.
Even so, as the rankings reflect, this is probably Pakistan's best format. In its current state, that's a bit like the straightest line in a Picasso painting, but it isn't like Pakistan are producing masterpieces anywhere else. Before they timed their horror run with devastating precision at the most important juncture of the year, Pakistan had come into 2025 on a wave off ODI optimism. Three consecutive away series wins - in Australia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa - made them look a formidable side with a set template that worked consistently. Saim Ayub was in the form of his life at the top and Shaheen Afridi and Haris Rauf each were among the top wicket-takers for fast bowlers in 2024.
Saim Ayub is back to full fitness and back to the Caribbean, where he has had success in the CPL•Associated Press
While all of that was to vaporise in the wake of Ayub's injury in Cape Town, the core of Pakistan's side remains similar to the that one. And Ayub is now back to full fitness, as well as nearing his best form. The bowling is led by Shaheen and Naseem Shah, while wicketkeeper batter Mohammad Rizwan captains the side.
Babar Azam, No. 2 in the ICC ODI rankings, also returns. But in the wake of Fakhar Zaman's injury, it remains to be seen if Pakistan replicate their cack-handed strategy of throwing him up to open the batting in the Champions Trophy, inspired by Aqib Javed and random hope rather than any evidence of its wisdom.
West Indies' squad is not dissimilar to the one that had toured England over the summer, though Shimron Hetmyer continues to be unavailable with a side strain. Brandon King and Evin Lewis have shaken off injuries to form part of the squad.
While Trinidad & Tobago, where all three ODIs will be played, has a reputation for turn, information on conditions at the new venue in Tarouba is harder to come by. The Brian Lara Cricket Academy has only hosted one ODI, a game where India beat West Indies in by 200 runs. Barring weather playing spoilsport with Trinidad in the peak of its wet season, the three upcoming games will clarify if West Indies' decision to go in with just one specialist spinner alongside Roston Chase was judicious.
This series may not have a lot going for it commercially. It's the wrong format, in the wrong time zone, between the wrong sides, in the wrong season. But for West Indies, it could prove the difference between the life support of an ICC World Cup berth or the financial oblivion of missing out once more.
For the visitors it is a chance to show themselves as much as anyone else they still have the quality to be world-class at a time when Pakistan cricket is less marketable than it has ever been. If a measure of a series' value is what's at stake for it, then perhaps there's not much wrong about the games that will unfold in Trinidad this week.
Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000