Not every match deserves a cinematic screen. But this one did.
When Cameron Green slammed a straight six to bring up his fifty, it wasn’t just a knock.
It was the moment. The kind that deserves to live not just in your memory, but on a screen that feels like memory.
The first T20I between West Indies and Australia wasn’t just a game.
It was an unfolding of drama filled with momentum swings, surprise debuts, and power-hitting so clean it begged for 144Hz smoothness.
Let’s break it down.
And see why this match and matches like these need a screen built for big nights.
What makes a match unforgettable?

It’s not just the final score.
It’s the mini moments
The slower balls that dip. The misfields that spark. The new player who steals the show.
Mitchell Owen, debuting for Australia, walked in like he’d been playing for years.
A 50 on debut. A pressure situation. A perfect partnership with Green.
Together, they chased down 190 with poise that felt scripted.
But here’s the thing, these moments hit differently when you see them differently.
Your old TV just couldn’t keep up
Here’s the hard truth, standard displays can’t handle modern cricket.
Not the 90mph bouncers
Not the flashing blades at deep square.
Not the quick switch from a bright Caribbean sunset to night-time floodlights.
It all gets flattened.
The screen lags. The shadows blur. The emotion disappears.
Watching cricket like that is like listening to a concert on a phone speaker
You can, but you really shouldn’t.
Why 144Hz isn’t just for gamers anymore

Cricket has changed. Your screen should too.
When Glenn Maxwell reverse-sweeps into third man, it happens in a fraction of a second.
And on a 144Hz refresh rate like the 165cm (55) Mini LED TV, you don’t just watch it you feel the bat turn.
Fast action stays sharp. Slow motion feels liquid.
That extra smoothness? It’s not a gimmick. It’s the difference between seeing a shot and feeling the timing.
Mini LED. Major emotions
Let’s talk about light and shadow.
Not every ball is bowled under sunlight.
And not every cricket night is watched in a well-lit drawing room.
That’s where Mini LED + Dolby Vision IQ steps in.
It adjusts dynamically to your room’s ambient light.
So whether you’ve drawn the curtains for a night match or sunlight’s spilling in during a Sunday afternoon ODI,
The picture stays perfect.
Think deep blacks where the ball disappears into the stands.
Think vibrant oranges on David Warner’s gloves.
Think sweat droplets on a fast bowler’s browvisible frame by frame.
What about sound? Just listen
A 2.1 channel woofer with Dolby Atmos isn’t just about volume.
It’s about placement.
With the Mini LED TV, you hear:
- The crowd rising in layers from behind.
- The umpire’s soft call echo from the centre.
- The whoosh of the bat swing comes from the side.
You’re not watching the match. You’re inside it.
The kind of Google TV cricket fans never knew they needed

1. Hands-free voice control
Because who wants to fumble for the remote with samosas in hand?
2. Smart content recommendations
Missed the highlights? Your TV didn’t. It’s already queued up.
3. Solar-powered remote
Yes. Sunlight charges it. Because cricket is a summer sport, after all.
Owen’s debut deserved a debut-worthy screen
Here’s the irony.
Millions of fans watched that West Indies vs Australia game on laggy streams, overcompressed networks, or tiny phone screens.
But what did that game actually deserve?
A 165cm canvas with 240 local dimming zones and more than just pixels. It needed precision.
And that’s where this Mini LED TV comes in not as a screen, but as a stage.
If you’re going to watch greatness, watch it properly
You could wait for the World Cup.
You could tell yourself, “Next year I’ll upgrade.”
But cricket doesn’t wait.
Neither do moments like Owen’s debut, Green’s finishing blow, or Dwarshuis tightening the screws with 4-for-23.
And if these players are leveling up, your screen should too.
Because in cricket, like in life, clarity changes everything

The sharper you see, the more you feel.
The more you feel, the more it stays with you.
And that’s what the 144Hz Mini LED 165cm (55) with Dolby Vision (H55M90EUX) offers:
- 144Hz refresh rate for motion so smooth it rewrites replay.
- Mini LED brilliance for precision and pop.
- Dolby Atmos sound that puts you in the middle of the roar.
- Smart Google TV with voice control that listens before you even finish the sentence.
So what’s the takeaway?
Not every match deserves a screen like this.
But some? Some absolutely demand it.
Green and Owen earned their moment.Let’s make sure your TV doesn’t miss it.