"England is a different challenge. The wickets are slower [compared] to what they are back home, and it swings around a bit." © Getty

Australian batsman Shaun Marsh is ready to be flexible in his role for the upcoming World Cup. After scoring an unbeaten half-century against West Indies in the unofficial warm-up match, sharing a century stand with Steve Smith, Marsh said: "I'd like to think I'm nice and flexible, I've batted from one to six throughout my career. I'm just going to try and enjoy the next two practice games and spend more time out in the middle and see what happens."

Windies set Australia a modest target of 230 and Australia chased it down with utmost ease with more than 11 overs to spare. Smith top-scored for them with 76 and Shaun Marsh remained unbeaten on 55.

Marsh scored heavily against England in the five-match bilateral series which Australia lost 5-0 last year. He ended up as Australia's highest run-scorer with 288 runs at an average of 57.60, including two magnificent hundreds. But the return of David Warner and Steve Smith has put his place in danger. Only one between Marsh and Usman Khawaja is likely to start and at the moment Khawaja seems ahead after a stellar series against India.

"It certainly gives you confidence if you've scored runs here in the past, it was nice to spend some time out in the middle and get my feet moving. I enjoy batting out here. Obviously, it's a different challenge. The wickets are slower [compared] to what they are back home, and it swings around a bit," he added.

Australia will start their World Cup campaign against Afghanistan on June 1 at Bristol but before that they will be facing England and Sri Lanka in two warm-up matches.