MOUNT MAUNGANUI, New Zealand — With the series on the line and momentum firmly against them, the West Indies enter the final Test at Bay Oval under no illusions about what must change.
Assistant coach Floyd Reifer delivered a candid appraisal of his side’s batting ahead of Wednesday’s series decider against New Zealand, stressing that survival, patience, and conversion, not flair, will determine the outcome.
Trailing 0-1 after a heavy defeat in Wellington, the tourists face a final opportunity to salvage pride and parity in the three-match contest.
Setbacks compound the challenge
The West Indies will again be without opener Tagenarine Chanderpaul, who remains sidelined by a side strain, further unsettling an already fragile top order. Compounding the disruption, Performance Analyst Avenesh Seetaram has returned home due to a personal family matter, slightly thinning the team’s support structure at a critical juncture of the tour.
At the heart of Reifer’s concern is a recurring flaw that has haunted the West Indies throughout the series: promising starts followed by abrupt dismissals. While individual flashes have surfaced, sustained dominance with the bat has remained elusive.
“We’ve spoken about this, and this is something we want to improve on,” Reifer said. “When we’re in control of the situation, to stay in control for longer periods of time. In Test cricket, batting is doing great things for long periods.”
The numbers reinforce his point. Beyond Justin Greaves’ double century and Shai Hope’s hundred in the opening Test, the batting unit has repeatedly allowed strong positions to slip, often immediately after the hardest work had been done.
Conversion remains the missing ingredient
Despite consistent emphasis from the coaching staff, the issue has yet to be resolved. Reifer acknowledged both the effort invested and the frustration at the lack of tangible reward.
“We had a lot of starts, but unfortunately, none of those starts converted into hundreds,” he admitted.
The assistant coach made clear that the responsibility now lies collectively with the batters to deliver evidence that the message has been absorbed.
Four hours as the benchmark for success
Reifer’s prescription is straightforward in concept but demanding in execution: time at the crease.
“We believe that once you bat four hours plus in a Test match, you guarantee a hundred,” he said. “It’s just about going through the different phases, understanding the situation, and just looking to continue to do what you were doing for long periods of time. That’s how we will get over this period of getting started and not continuing.”
New Zealand conditions leave no room for error
Bay Oval’s conditions promise to test that discipline immediately. Reifer acknowledged the challenge posed by a surface expected to assist seamers early, particularly with the new ball.
“The first two days, it’s good for bowling. The ball will nip around a lot here, but this is where we need to dial in and be focused the most,” he said.
His final message to the batting group was one of controlled intent and accountability.
“There are certain shots you can and cannot play early in New Zealand with the new ball. So just staying disciplined and for players to take more responsibility in terms of how they go about their innings.”
As the series reaches its conclusion, the West Indies’ path forward is clear but unforgiving. Only sustained, disciplined batting, measured in hours rather than moments, will offer a way back into the contest and a chance to leave Mount Maunganui with something to show for the tour.

















