West Indies skipper Shai Hope has spoken of his disappointment that his team could not produce a complete performance with the bat, after suffering a 5-0 T20I series whitewash at the hands of Australia. The final game, played in St. Kitts, witnessed the visitors secure a narrow three-wicket win after dismissing West Indies for 170, their lowest score of the series. In spite of a good beginning with the ball, where they had Australia at 60 for 4 in the powerplay, a major loss was when Alzarri Joseph had to be taken off the field after only one ball from his third over because of injury. His loss made an already thin bowling attack even thinner. During the series, West Indies couldn't establish purposeful partnerships. During the first game, they were going strong at 123 for 1 but collapsed to end at 189. The second game also witnessed another collapse, as they dropped from 63 for 0 to 172 for 8. When the series transferred to St. Kitts, Hope and Brandon King provided some sparkle by staging a 125-run stand for the first wicket. Still, the middle order failed to capitalise on the groundwork again. While the West Indies improved late in the last two encounters, Australia remained solidly in charge overall. Each time, the visitors chased down the scores with some space to spare. Read also: Dale Steyn Backs England’s Handshake Call vs India Here is what Hope said in the post-match presentation "I just didn't think we put together a proper batting display. We either started well and finished poorly or the other way around. When you're playing against quality opposition like Australia, you've got to put things together for a more complete game,” . "As a batting group, we didn't really give ourselves the best chance to put a big score on the board consistently. And that's probably where we fell short… We've always been one step behind the eight ball," he added. Australia Dominate Entire Tour with Historic 8-0 Sweep Over West Indies Australia wrapped up a dominant tour with an 8-match winning streak against West Indies, sweeping the 3 Tests and all 5 T20Is. In the final T20I at Warner Park, St. Kitts, they chased down 171 to win by 3 wickets. Mitchell Owen (37) and Tim David (30 off 12) led the charge, while Aaron Hardie kept his cool to finish the job. Akeal Hosein led the hosts with 3-17. Shimron Hetmyer had top-scored earlier with 52, and Adam Zampa marked his 100th T20I with a wicket. Cameron Green was Player of the Series as Australia whitewashed a full member side for the first time in a T20I series.