In a tactical twist that defied pitch reports, both India and West Indies loaded their XIs with spinners for the opening match—even though the surface at Queen’s Park Oval showed visible grass cover. The biggest headline? Kuldeep Yadav’s return to the XI after being benched throughout India’s entire England tour earlier this year.
The West Indies handed Test caps to two fresh faces:
| Team | Spinners Selected | Notable Omission |
|---|---|---|
| India | Kuldeep Yadav, Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel | Washington Sundar (bench), pace-heavy options ignored |
| West Indies | Jaden Layne (debut), Kevin Sinclair, Veerasammy Permaul | Alzarri Joseph rested; focus on control over pace |
After being overlooked in all five Tests in England—where India opted for seam-heavy attacks—Kuldeep’s inclusion signals a strategic pivot. With the Caribbean pitch expected to offer turn later in the match, India’s think tank is banking on his wrist spin to break partnerships.
“This is a pitch that plays slower than it looks,” said former India spinner Harbhajan Singh in a pre-match analysis. “Grass doesn’t always mean pace—it can also retain moisture for spinners on days 3 and 4.”
The decision to prioritize spin could set the tone for the entire series, especially if early wickets fall to slow bowlers. For West Indies, debuting two players in such a high-stakes match reflects a long-term vision—even at the risk of short-term instability.
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