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Leeds, June 23 : West Indies' quest to salvage pride from a
wretched One-Day International series ended in disappointment when
persistent rain washed out the third and final game without a ball
bowled here Friday.
With the outfield at Headingley saturated,
match officials were left with no choice but to abandon the contest at
1:11 pm local time.
England won the series 2-0 after taking the first ODI at the Rose Bowl by 114 runs last Saturday and the second game at the Oval by eight wickets Tuesday.
The
wash-out summed up the West Indies fortunes in a series where they were
tagged as favourites but failed to live up to expectations.
"All
of us were happy with the prospects for the ODI series. But this is a
perfect case of 'cricket don't play on paper'," captain Darren Sammy
said afterward.
"You could have the best-looking team, but at the
end of the day, you have to go out on the pitch and perform. We have
not done this in the ODI series and England went about doing the job
very professionally."
With the West Indies also losing the
preceding three-Test series 0-2, Sammy said his side would now focus on
finding redemption through Sunday's Twenty20 International.
He said a win at Trent Bridge would set the tone for the New Zealand series which begins at month end.
"Winning
the T20 would be a good way to end and finish on a high note, so we can
take that momentum into the series we have against New Zealand," he
said.
"Winning would be a good way to finish."
Rain has wreaked havoc on the Windies tour of England, ruining the opening tour match at Hove last month and returning to wreck the two-day tour match at Grace Road.
The weather also reduced the third Test at Edgbaston to just two days play.
© IANS
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