Apparently, Sri Lanka are about to begin a Test series against West Indies on Thursday. Huge if true, because that would mean that Sri Lanka still have a Test team. And that West Indies also still have a Test team. Sri Lanka haven’t played this format for exactly a year, and West Indies haven’t played since December 2025. Sri Lanka have 12 Tests in the entire two-year World Test Championship (WTC) 2025-27 cycle, which is the minimum allowed amount. West Indies have 15 Tests, one of those being a non-WTC game against Afghanistan.
This is the lay of Test cricket in 2026. It doesn’t matter that West Indies produced very arguably the greatest Test team in the history of the sport in the 1980s. It doesn’t matter that Sri Lanka produced Test cricket’s most prolific wicket-taker, in Muttiah Muralitharan. It mainly matters that both have tiny cricket economies in comparison to most other sides, and as such, they have each been shunted deep into Test cricket second-classhood – for this cycle at least.
But here is a chance to prove they deserve more matches in this format. Sri Lanka have been a mid-table team in the three WTC cycles so far; they ended seventh, fifth and sixth, respectively. West Indies, meanwhile, have generally been a lower-table team; they finished eighth each of the three times. Both sides will see this as an opportunity to push for more matches.
Capitalist impulses shape the international schedule much more than cricketing performance does, but perhaps West Indies and Sri Lanka can make the kind of case that South Africa and New Zealand have managed to do over the last six years – that they deserve an extra Test here and there purely because they are proficient Test outfits.
In any case, West Indies and Sri Lanka are generally evenly-matched sides when playing in the Caribbean. Of the five Tests these sides have played in the West Indies over the last ten years, they have won one game each, and played out three draws, some of which were rain-affected.
But there is no serious measure through which form can be judged. Rust will need to be shaken off. Red-ball skills will need to be revived for many players. And while Sri Lanka are on the WTC points table with a draw and a victory against Bangladesh in June last year, West Indies are still looking for their first win this cycle, having logged seven losses and a draw so far.
Form guide
West Indies: LLDLL (Most recent first) Sri Lanka: WDLLL
In the spotlight
Kemar Roach is six wickets away from becoming the fifth West Indies fast bowler to 300 Test wickets. West Indies’ fast bowling might just be the richest bloodline in all of cricket, so this would be no minor feat. Ahead of him on the West Indies list are all-time greats: Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose and Malcolm Marshall, although spinner Lance Gibbs was the first to get to 300, way back in the 1970s.
Behind Roach are more all-time greats: Joel Garner and Michael Holding. Roach’s journey has been a triumph of longevity – he has never played more than eight Tests in a calendar year. And he has not had the kind of fast-bowling support that the great names around him had had. But Roach has generally been good against Sri Lanka, and West Indies would love to have this milestone to celebrate some time during this series.
Dhananjaya de Silva is among the players who has clamoured most for more Test cricket for his side, and as he is largely only picked in Sri Lanka’s Test XI now, he hasn’t had an especially busy international schedule over the past year. Since Sri Lanka achieved Test status, there has perhaps never been a Test captain whose job has felt so minor in the larger landscape of Sri Lanka’s cricket.
Dhananjaya will be especially motivated to turn that profile around. A couple of wins in the West Indies would set Sri Lanka up nicely for a serious push towards a top-two placing on the WTC table. South Africa showed in the last cycle that a scant Test schedule doesn’t have to mean mediocrity of skill.
Pitch and conditions
The weather forecast for North Sound is good for the next few days. Temperatures are also forecast to stay a shade under 30 degrees Celsius, which both teams will find relatively comfortable. There has been no Test cricket at this venue since November 2024, so it’s difficult to predict how the track will play, but it has generally favoured seamers.
Team news
West Indies have a decision to make on who will keep wicket, but having had a decent run against Sri Lanka in the past, Joshua da Silva might get the spot. The bowling will be led by Roach, but the two Josephs, fast bowlers Shamar and Alzarri, will likely be in attendance. They could also think about playing a fourth seamer in Jayden Seales.
Sri Lanka have a fairly stable top order, but will be less sure of how their bowling attack should shape up. Of the seamers, Asitha Fernando is the likeliest to play.
Sri Lanka’s most recent Test series in the West Indies, in 2021, also featured two Tests played at North Sound.
Seales, if he plays, has a shot at getting to 100 Test wickets. He is currently sitting on 95.
Quotes
“I think when you speak about Jayden and Kemar, it’s a teacher-and-student relationship that they have. Kemar is a guy that always gives that knowledge to Jayden. And Jayden is always a guy who always wants to learn and improve because he’s young. Kemar being so close to 300 wickets shows the kind of class he has.” West Indies captain Roston Chase on the fast-bowling pair of Kemar Roach and Jayden Seales
Andrew Fidel Fernando is a senior writer at Cricinfo. @afidelf