Ricardo Powell

Ricardo Powell
Personal information
Full name Ricardo Lloyd Powell
Born (1978-12-16) 16 December 1978
St Elizabeth, Jamaica
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Role Batsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 231) December 16, 1999 v New Zealand
Last Test April 10, 2004 v England
ODI debut (cap 94) May 16, 1999 v Pakistan
Last ODI August 7, 2005 v India
ODI shirt no. 34
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1997-2003 Jamaica (squad no. 34)
2003-2006 Trinidad & Tobago (squad no. 34)
Career statistics
Competition Tests ODIs FC List A
Matches 2 109 37 149
Runs scored 53 2085 1584 2778
Batting average 17.66 24.82 27.31 24.58
100s/50s -/- 1/8 2/8 1/11
Top score 30 124 115 1124
Balls bowled 78 473 1550 971
Wickets - 11 13 29
Bowling average - 44.63 51.69 31.68
5 wickets in innings - - - -
10 wickets in match - n/a - -
Best bowling - 2/5 3/75 3/27
Catches/stumpings 1/- 43/- 26/- 69/-
Source: , June 25 2016

Ricardo Lloyd Powell (born December 16, 1978 in St Elizabeth, Jamaica) is West Indian cricketer from Jamaica. He represented Jamaica national cricket team as well as Trinidad and Tobago national cricket team from 1997 to 2005.

He is widely regarded by many West Indian greats including Michael Holding as a wasted talent. Curiously, he has been known to perform much better against India national cricket team than any other international team, a trait he shares with others such as Aaqib Javed.

Domestic Career

Powell was 19 when he made his first-class debut in the 1996-96 season and followed it up with a List A debut in the following year in 1998-99 season.

Powell moved from Jamaica in 2003 to his wife's native country of Trinidad. Powell took a hiatus from the game after his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. He made his Twenty20 debut at Stanford Cricket Ground in Coolidge, Antigua when Trinidad and Tobago national cricket team played against Cayman Islands national cricket team in Stanford 20/20. [1][2]

International Career

He was the youngest West Indian to score an ODI century. He made 2,000 ODI runs at a strike rate of 96.66, which is the highest strike rate of a West Indian player with more than 1000 ODI runs and he also emulated Gordon Greenidge by hitting 8 sixes in an ODI innings against India cricket team in 1999 at Singapore which was a West Indian ODI record.

He also hit seven sixes in another ODI against India cricket team at Toronto that same year. In total, he hit 75 sixes in 100 ODI innings, a ratio equal to that of Viv Richards. Such stunning performances from the 20-year-old led to comparisons with the great Viv Richards but for some reason the selectors seemed to pigeon-hole him as a One Day player, and he found himself in and out of the side, and being shunted up and down the batting order. [3]

He played 109 One Day matches for the West Indies cricket team and 2 Tests matches in his career against New Zealand cricket team in 1999[4] and England cricket team in 2004 in which Brian Lara became first batsman to score 400 runs in Test cricket.[5]

US career

He played the game professionally and resides in the United States where he played cricket with the Indian Lions Cricket Club and works as a Cricket Analyst with ESPN.

In June 2016, Powell was named as new chairman of USA selection panel. The panel includes Asif Mujtaba, Michael Voss, Amer Afzaluddin and Barney Jones. His first assignment is to select USA senior men's for ICC World Cricket League Division Four which will be hosted Los Angeles as well as Under-17 squads. [6][7]

Personal Life

He is married to Caribbean TV Talk show host Basia Alicia Powell. The couple has two boys, Ricardo Powell Jr and Ross Powell.

References

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