29 April 1999
Good luck, Ricardo
Tony Becca
A few months ago, Ricardo Powell was just another young cricketer
with nothing but a dream. A few days from now, the 20-year-old
batsman will be in England as a member of the West Indies team
challenging for the World Cup.
If it sounds like a fairytale, that's what it is.
In 1998, Powell represented a short-staffed Jamaica team in the
regional four-day tournament, and after failing to distinguish
himself, after looking out of his depth, he was dropped after one
match.
This season, he failed to get into the team for the first three
matches and was only selected, it appeared, when the younger
Christopher Gayle took ill and had to be replaced.
That, apparently, was all he wanted. It was an opportunity and he
grabbed it with both hands.
After a brilliant performance in the field against the Windward
Islands at Alpart, Powell went to bat with Jamaica on 34 for four, he
drove fast bowler Cameron Cuffy through extra-cover to get off the
mar, and although he scored only 23 runs, he batted well and
confidently on a dicey pitch, he demonstrated a maturity in an
innings which lasted for 99 minutes and he reeled off two other
impressive boundary strokes - an ondrive off pacer McNeil Morgan and
a drive through extra-cover off pacer Casper Davis.
That was just a sample of a precocious talent.
In the following match against Barbados at Kensington Oval, he
arrived on the scene with Jamaica struggling at three for three and
slammed 80 (two sixes and 11 fours) off 119 deliveries and in his
next outing, also against Barbados at Kensington, he went to bat with
Jamaica on 25 for three and blasted 114 not out (three sixes and 17
fours) off 118 deliveries.
After his second assault on the best of Barbados, cricket fans around
the region welcomed Powell as a refreshing talent and the West Indies
selectors responded by naming him to the West Indies Board XI and the
West Indies A teams against Australia.
Powell failed to perform, but to many, including a number of those
who should know, that did not matter.
To former greats like Sir Garfield Sobers and Sir Everton Weekes who
saw him in all his glory at Kensington Oval, the young Jamaican had
done enough in the Busta Cup to suggest t he is someone special and
in selecting him although he has never played in even one one-day
international, the selectors, probably led by Joel Garner, obviously
agree he is someone special.
In calling up young Powell, the selectors must have considered a few
of those they have been grooming on the A team, and if they were
putting together a Test team, they probably would have looked
elsewhere - probably in the direction of Wavell Hinds, Ramnaresh
Sarwan or Gayle.
The World Cup, however, is different, the player Powell has replaced
is Carl Hooper and apart from being an explosive batsman, he is also
a useful offspin bowler and a brilliant fielder.
There is nothing more refreshing than young talent on parade -
especially the kind of talent which promises exciting play and now
that his dream has come true, now that his fairytale season has ended
happily, the hope is that Ricardo Powell, the young gun who has been
itching to get into action, will explode on the cricket fields of
England.
Source :: The Jamaica Gleaner (https://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/)