COLOMBO – Captain Darren Sammy hopes winning the World Twenty20 title will inspire West Indies to “start something special”.
COLOMBO – Captain Darren Sammy hopes winning the World Twenty20 title will inspire West Indies to "start something special”.A 56-ball 78 from Marlon Samuels helped West Indies recover from a poor start and set up a 36-run win over Sri Lanka."This is the start of something special for the West Indies team and the fans back home,” said Sammy."We won’t say ‘we’re back’. Hopefully it’s a step in the right direction and we’ve made the people proud. I’ll always cherish this moment.”West Indies, the dominant team in international cricket from the late 1970s through to the 1990s, celebrated wildly in Colombo as they won their first major competition since the 2004 Champions Trophy."Throughout the last two years we’ve shown a never-say-die attitude,” added Sammy, who made an unbeaten 26 from 15 deliveries in a total of 137-6 which looked unlikely when they were 32-2 after 10 overs.Sri Lanka seemed in control as they restricted West Indies’ batsmen, with Chris Gayle taking 16 balls to make three.But an inspired Samuels hit six sixes and three fours to shift the balance of power, before Sri Lanka were bowled out for 101 in the 19th over.Man of the match Samuels, who was suspended from the game for two years for passing on team information to a bookmaker in 2007, described the victory as a moment which would "live forever”."Two years and I’m back. I can’t explain how much this means to me,” said Samuels, who also took 1-15 off four overs.West Indies are the only team to win the World Cup, World Twenty20 and Champions Trophy outright. India also have their name on all three titles, but shared the 2002 Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka.