Unlike South Africa, which treated India like a tactical puzzle to be solved, the West Indies carried themselves differently on the eve of their biggest game of the T20 World Cup 2026. Their session at the Eden Gardens was light. A few batters assessing conditions. Some big shots between 2–5 pm. A handful of players turned up for the optional session. No visible frenzy. No theatrical intensity.
However, Daren Sammy did not seem concerned. At the press conference, he brushed aside the lack of numbers in the net session. All his soldiers, he insisted, were ready. To win this tournament, he said, every team would have to go through India at some point. West Indies were simply embracing that challenge now — on a ground that has been kind to them in World Cups.
“Of course, every time we come to Eden Gardens, it brings back good memories. I love being here. But I can tell you all my soldiers, be ready for battle tomorrow when we call upon,” Sammy said.
DAVID vs GOLIATH: SAMMY WANTS TO DOWN INDIA
Much of the West Indies’ training was batting-focused. They assessed the conditions and launched into their strokes under Sammy’s watchful gaze from behind the nets.
From the sidelines, little children — perhaps too young to remember 2016 but old enough to have heard about it — shouted, “We love you, Sammy sir! One picture, Sammy sir!”
Sammy nodded. A thumbs up here. A brief smile there.
One older gentleman, who had witnessed the 2016 World Cup final in person, cut through the noise and asked, “How does it feel to return to Eden Gardens? The venue that was so kind to you in 2016?”

Sammy closed his eyes, lifted his hands slightly, and replied: “It feels very, very good. Thank you.”
That warmth resurfaced later in the press conference when a reporter pointed out that, apart from India, the West Indies are perhaps the only team to draw such loud cheers from this crowd.
A cheeky Sammy smiled.
“I’m pretty sure they’ll have 80,000 here tomorrow and then another 1.4 billion supporting India. So it will still feel like a David and Goliath showdown. But as I said in 2016, David beat Goliath. That’s what I’m going to tell my boys tomorrow.”
SAMMY CALLS ON HIS SOLDIERS
West Indies know they come into this contest with shortcomings.
Their batting is hit-and-miss. The bowling is nowhere close to world standard. On a high-scoring surface like Eden, that gap could widen quickly.

These warnings are not new to Sammy.
He remains the only captain to have won two T20 World Cups. And in 2016, it was his West Indies that knocked India out of the tournament. In a high-scoring game at the Wankhede Stadium, the Windies chased down 193, finishing with a four and a six courtesy of Andre Russell.
They do have players capable of something similar in Kolkata.
And Sammy made sure to remind reporters of that on Saturday. It was not said as a warning, but it could have been. It might have been.
“Well, there is a saying that history could repeat itself,” Sammy said.
Sammy, like the proverbial leader that he is, has called upon his past experiences. He has been telling stories of the old — the legends and the myths — to his pupils, hoping that it injects belief and pride into the group – two crucial weapons when you are up against a much stronger opponent.

“I just use my experience of being here before, talking positively about how good Eden Gardens have been to us, talking positively about how well the team have done, the belief and the camaraderie in the camp, and that moves on to performance. So it’s another game, a big one, but the basics and the process remain the same.”
In the space of four days, the West Indies played two of the best teams in the tournament. They have already lost against one in Ahmedabad. Sammy is not interested in losing another.
As he sees it, this is 11 dangerous men against 11 dangerous men. Whoever executes better moves to the semi-final. The other is left with that familiar question: what could I have done more?
He knows how that feels. You build, you break, and then you build again.
In 24 hours, one of the two-time champions will be knocked out of the T20 World Cup.
Sammy has already framed the contest in his mind. He has invoked the myth, rallied his men by calling them soldiers, by asking them to follow him into battle. He understands what awaits — the noise, the tilt of the crowd, the weight of expectation that follows India wherever they play.

Eden Gardens has been kind to him before. It has given him nights he still closes his eyes to revisit. He knows the odds. But he also knows what belief can do to a dressing room that has nothing to lose.
On Sunday evening, when the noise rises and the game tightens, that belief — quiet, stubborn, unshakeable — is what he will lean on. And hope, that it is enough.
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