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De Villiers 162* off 66, WI 151 all out

Pride squad the same for round eight

27th February 2015 Comments Off on Holding backs Gayle to kick on Views: 1529 News

Holding backs Gayle to kick on

CANBERRA—Former West Indies fast bowler Michael Holding believes Chris Gayle’s whirlwind double-century against Zimbabwe was his most dominant innings and would have come as a relief to the batsman, while England’s Jonathan Trott felt the knock simply reaffirmed how crucial Gayle was to West Indies’ plans of going far in the World Cup.

Holding and Trott were speaking on ESPNcricinfo’s match analysis show.

Gayle had gone 19 months and 19 innings without scoring an ODI hundred since July 2013, raising questions from certain sections about his place in the team, but Holding said Gayle always had it in him to silence his critics with a big score.

“I had a feeling Gayle might come around to the party this time,” Holding said. “He has shown everyone he is still capable of getting runs, and at a fantastic rate. He started slowly, but he has been in bad form, so you could expect that.

“You could see that it was a big relief. The catch that he took and then he just rolled about for 50 yards and he was just having a ball. You can see Chris Gayle walking on the field and people say that he looks a little disinterested, moping. He gets a good knock and everything changes.”

Gayle took 105 balls to reach his hundred, but as the innings wore, he grew more authoritative, regularly pulling every Zimbabwe bowler over the leg-side boundary. At the end of his 147-ball 215, Gayle had broken a host of records—the highest World Cup score, the fastest double-hundred, and tied for the most sixes in an ODI. Gayle received ample support from Marlon Samuels, with whom he added an ODI record partnership of 372 runs.

Such was the ferocity with which Gayle played, according to Holding, that it allowed Samuels to go about his own game and compile a handy 133.

“Gayle’s innings was special because it was so dominant. Samuels did not look like he was in a rush or that he had to score too quickly. That was because Gayle dominated the entire proceedings.

“If you’re batting alongside Gayle with the form he was in today, it doesn’t matter how good a player you are. You’ll automatically relax a bit since you don’t have to take any risk. So all Samuels had to do was push around and put the bad balls away.”

Trott said he was reminded of another powerful innings watching Gayle bat: Martin Guptill’s unbeaten 189 which sunk England in 2013. On that day, Trott had replied with a century of his own, but England couldn’t get close to the 360-run target.

“You could see the relief on Gayle’s face, and just how appreciative he was of his team-mates.”

However, Trott was also quick to point out how Gayle had enjoyed a big slice of luck in his innings. Tinashe Panyangara had an appeal for lbw turned down after curling one into Gayle when the batsman was yet to get off the mark. Panyangara reviewed, and even though the replays suggested the ball would go on to knock the bails off, umpire Steve Davis’ original call was upheld. Then, when he was on 121, Gayle skied one down long-on’s throat, but Panyangara had overstepped his mark while delivering the ball.

“The key thing was he could’ve been given out. If that had been given, none of us would have batted an eyelid,” Trott said. “It’s amazing how quickly things can turnaround in sport.”

Taken from Trinidad Guardian

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