West Indies’ omission of Gudakesh Motie from the upcoming Test matches against Sri Lanka is hard to defend when judged against form, output, and basic cricketing logic. If selection is supposed to reward performance, then leaving out a bowler who has been one of the region’s most productive left-arm spinners sends a damaging message, especially to Guyanese players who already have to fight for every inch of recognition.
Motie’s numbers and recent record make the decision look less like strategy and more like selective sight.
Motie’s overall Test bowling record is strong: 35 wickets in 11 Tests at an average of 27.02, with best figures of 7 for 37 and two five-wicket hauls. In white-ball cricket, he has also been consistently effective, with 33 ODI wickets and 31 T20I wickets to his name. That is not the profile of a bowler who should be casually left out when spin-friendly opportunities come around.
Even if the selectors want to talk about “balance” or “conditions,” Motie has already shown he can be a wicket-taking option at international level, not just a promising prospect. A bowler with 35 Test wickets from only 11 matches deserves more than a shrug and a seat on the sideline.[timesnownews]
The selection issue
The bigger concern is that his omission does not appear to be explained by a lack of quality. West Indies have previously rested or omitted Motie for workload or tactical reasons, but those explanations become thin when a player continues to produce. In other words, when a man keeps taking wickets and still gets treated like extra luggage, people are bound to ask questions.
If the squad’s chosen bowlers are being preferred on current form, the selectors need to show that case with hard evidence, not vibes and vague cricketing poetry. If they are being preferred on balance, then the balance still has to be justified by results, because Test cricket is not a festival where everyone gets a turn at the mic.
For Guyanese fans, this one stings because Motie is not just another spinner; he represents a broader pattern many supporters believe they have seen for years.
When a Guyanese player performs and still gets overlooked, the question inevitably becomes whether the issue is form, fit, or simply old-fashioned bias .That suspicion may be uncomfortable, but cricket decisions have a habit of creating the very politics they pretend not to see.
And as we say in Guyana, “when your own hoss win the race and still get told to hold the rope, somebody doing theatre.” That is the mood this selection has created: lots of head-scratching, plenty of kitchen-table commentary, and a fair amount of side-eye from the Guyanese fans .
Motie’s Test record stacks up well against many bowlers who are often selected for less. Since the available selection details here do not include the full squad list with comparable bowling stats, the strongest evidence-based argument is that Motie’s own numbers are already good enough to make his exclusion controversial. His record suggests he should have been in the conversation . Like I fed up !
One Guyana 🇬🇾