CHRIS GAYLE BIOGRAPHY
Full name Christopher Henry Gayle
Born September 21, 1979, Kingston, Jamaica
Major teams West Indies, ICC World XI, Jamaica, Kolkata
Knight Riders, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Stanford Superstars, Western
Australia, Worcestershire
Playing role Allrounder
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Christopher Henry Gayle
A thrusting Jamaican left-hander, Gayle earned himself a
black mark on his first senior tour - to England in 2000 - where the new boys
were felt to be insufficiently respectful of their elders. But a lack of
respect, for opposition bowlers at least, has served Gayle well since then.
Tall and imposing at the crease, he loves to carve through the covers off
either foot, and has the ability to decimate the figures of even the thriftiest
of opening bowlers.
In a lean era for West Indian cricket - and fast bowling in
particular - Gayle's pugnacious approach has become an attacking weapon in its
own right. His 79-ball century at Cape Town in January 2004, on the back of a
South African first innings of 532, was typical of his no-holds-barred
approach. However, Gayle's good run ended when England came calling early in
2004, and he averaged 26 against their potent pace attack - Steve Harmison, in
particular, fancied his chances against Gayle, dismissing him four times in
seven innings, as a lack of positive footwork was exposed. But men with little
footwork often baffle experts, and after returning to form with an
uncharacteristic century against Bangladesh, he exacted his revenge on
England's bowlers with a battering not seen since Lara's 400, before coming
within a whisker of emulating Lara himself, with a career-best 317 against
South Africa in Antigua. In the disastrous 2005-06 tour of New Zealand he led
the batting in the three-Test series, piling 235 runs - no other West Indian
touched the 200-run mark. He also bowls brisk non-turning offspin, with which
he has turned himself into a genuine one-day allrounder. Maturing quickly, he
has become a consistently prolific scorer in the ODIs. He averaged over 40 in
the 2006-07 season with three hundreds - an unbeaten 133 against South Africa
in the Champions Trophy being the highlight, and three fifties. But expected to
be one of the stars of the World Cup in the Caribbean, his batting was a major
disappointment. In the absence of the injured Ramnaresh Sarwan for their tour
in 2007, Gayle was handed the captaincy for the limited-overs series in England
and Ireland and found immediate success by beating England 2-1. He also led in
the Test series against South Africa, leaving with a 1-1 result, and was
retained as captain ahead of Sarwan for the home Tests against Sri Lanka in
2008. A subsequent Test and ODI defeat at home against Australia led him to
quit the captaincy, but he changed his mind, and the following season was
instrumental in the defeats of England, both as captain of the Stanford
Superstars in their winner-takes-all US$20million match in Antigua in November,
and the Test team that secured a 1-0 triumph to bring home the Wisden Trophy
after a nine-year hiatus. By now, however, the Indian Premier League was taking
over as his primary concern - Gayle's US$800,000 price-tag made him one of
Kolkata's most expensive players, and though a groin injury ruled him out of
the first edition in 2008, he played seven games in 2009 before flying to
England just 48 hours before a Test match at Lord's against England. The match
was lost in three days, leading a disillusioned Gayle to declare that he
"would not be so sad" if Test cricket died out.
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
CHRIS GAYLE
No comments:
Post a Comment