Trinbago Knight Riders Coach Phil Simmons eyes his 2nd CPL trophy

Guyana Amazon Warriors have been head and shoulders above the rest of the teams, suffering only one defeat. They finished at the top of the points table. Trinbago Knight Riders secured second spot with 13 points.

Saint Lucia Kings regrouped well after their regular captain Faf du Plessis had to leave the tournament with injury. Sikandar Raza spearheaded the team adeptly as they finished the group stage with 10 points. The last playoff spot was clinched by the Jamaica Tallawahs, who earned timely victories and now have a stab at defending their title.

The Kings will face Tallawahs in the Eliminator on Wednesday while Amazon Warriors will lock horns with Knight Riders in the Qualifier 1 on Thursday. The winner of the Eliminator and the loser of Qualifier 1 will battle it out in Qualifier 2 for the coveted final spot.

These days, Former West Indies coach Phil Simmons is at the helm of the Caribbean Premier League’s (CPL) most successful team, the Trinbago Knight Riders (TKR), and he is striving to deliver a fifth title to the franchise.

Simmons is no stranger to CPL silverware, as he led the Barbados Royals to their second CPL title in the 2019 season.

After a disappointing 2022 CPL season, where TKR finished bottom of the six-team table, the franchise announced Simmons as their new coach on May 15, 2023. Simmons made his intentions clear prior to the 2023 campaign.

“The thing about it is, anybody who is not accustomed to being last and when you get there, you know that something is wrong,” Simmons told Newsday. “So we are trying to correct all the things that we did not do correctly last year.”

Simmons’ 12-year stint as a West Indies player ended in 1999, but not before he was honored with the Hummingbird Medal Silver award in 1997. He played 169 matches for the WI across the Test and one-day international (ODI) formats and scored six hundreds in his international career.

The Arima-born Simmons had a stint as head coach of the TT team from 2001 to 2003, before getting his first international coaching gig with Zimbabwe in 2004.

Simmons, 60, came to prominence in his next international coaching role, as his eight-year stint with Ireland helped the then-International Cricket Council (ICC) associate nation towards their push for full Test-match status – which they achieved in 2017.

He coached the Irish for over 200 games from 2007 to 2015, leading them to successive World Cups in 2011 and 2015.

At the 2011 World Cup, Ireland landed a major scalp in the group stage, as they defeated England by three wickets after hunting down a 328-run target in Bangalore, India.

At the 2015 edition, Ireland earned two more famous wins, as they defeated both Zimbabwe and the West Indies. In their group stage match-up with the WI, Simmons’ Irish team again showed their ability to chase big totals, as they beat the Caribbean team after getting to a 305-run total at the Saxton Oval in New Zealand.

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