Australia 1990–91 • 1st Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – match drawn • 2nd Test at
Bourda,
Georgetown – West Indies won by 10 wickets • 3rd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – match drawn • 4th Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 343 runs • 5th Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – Australia won by 157 runs
South Africa 1991–92 • 1st Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 52 runs
Pakistan 1992–93 • 1st Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – West Indies won by 204 runs • 2nd Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 10 wickets • 3rd Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – match drawn
England 1993–94 • 1st Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – West Indies won by 8 wickets • 2nd Test at
Bourda,
Georgetown – West Indies won by an innings and 44 runs • 3rd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – West Indies won by 147 runs • 4th Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – England won by 208 runs • 5th Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – match drawn
Australia 1994–95 The West Indians went into the series having not lost a series in 15 years. • 1st Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – Australia won by 10 wickets. The tourists' underdog status was amplified by pre-Test injuries to fast bowlers
Craig McDermott and
Damien Fleming. "Still, we somehow managed to catch them on the hop", wrote
Paul Reiffel. Victory was secured within 3 days. • 2nd Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – match drawn. • 3rd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – West Indies won by 9 wickets. Having endured substantial criticism from an enraged fourth estate for their lustreless display in the First Test,
Curtly Ambrose and
Courtney Walsh, the Caribbean's last great fast-bowling pair, lifted the ante and biffed the Australians with a barrage of short-pitched bowling. It was, wrote Reiffel, "one of the greenest wickets I ever saw". Steve Waugh knocked up a courageous 63 in the first innings, priming him for his legendary effort in Jamaica. • 4th Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – Australia won by an innings and 53 runs. The final Test arrived with the scoreline one-all, and the crowd came out in force. "They were noisy, knew their cricket, and could be intimidating if you gave them room", Reiffel recalled. "[T]he bowl was resounding in anticipation [...]." The Australian strategy was to occupy the crease and compile as large a total as possible, fearing the fourth-innings pitch.
Steve Waugh, coming in at 73 for three, joined his brother
Mark, "batted magnificently and built a fortress strong enough to keep West Indies at bay. Mark nonchalantly scored a beautiful century before getting out, but by then he had helped Steve build a solid platform." Inspired by Waugh's intrepid double century and the West Indies' depleted psychological funds, Reiffel picked up three quick wickets on the second-last evening. By the reckoning of Reiffel, it was this match – and, more specifically, Waugh's century, "one of the greatest feats of batting I ever witnessed" – which signified the transition of cricketing supremacy from the
West Indies to
Australia. It also secured the Frank Worrell Trophy.
New Zealand 1995–96 • 1st Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 10 wickets • 2nd Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – match drawn
India 1996–97 • 1st Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – match drawn • 2nd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – match drawn • 3rd Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 38 runs • 4th Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – match drawn • 5th Test at
Bourda,
Georgetown – match drawn
Sri Lanka 1996–97 • 1st Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – West Indies won by 6 wickets • 2nd Test at Arnos Vale Ground, Kingstown – match drawn
England 1997–98 • 1st Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – match drawn • 2nd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – West Indies won by 3 wickets • 3rd Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – England won by 3 wickets • 4th Test at
Bourda,
Georgetown – West Indies won by 242 runs • 5th Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – match drawn • [ 6th Test] at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – West Indies won by an innings and 52 runs
Australia 1998–99 CI Link • 1st Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – Australia won by 312 runs • 2nd Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – West Indies won by 10 wickets • 3rd Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – West Indies won by 1 wicket • 4th Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – Australia won by 176 runs
Zimbabwe 1999–2000 • 1st Test at
Queen's Park Oval,
Port of Spain,
Trinidad – West Indies won by 35 runs • 2nd Test at
Sabina Park,
Kingston – West Indies won by 10 wickets
Pakistan 1999–2000 • 1st Test at
Bourda,
Georgetown – match drawn • 2nd Test at
Kensington Oval,
Bridgetown, Barbados – match drawn • 3rd Test at
Antigua Recreation Ground,
St John's – West Indies won by 1 wicket ==See also==