'T20s come naturally to us'
Kieron Pollard talks about his franchise career, data in the game, and the prospect of the death of West Indies cricket

"In T20 cricket, I don't mind batting No. 4 or No. 5. You lose two or three quick wickets, or you come in when the team just needs you to accelerate it in the middle or accelerate at the end" • BCCI
I find it very interesting. You go, you get a job done, you impart your knowledge and then you move on. I think it's about being professional in everything that you do. Since I've been going around different teams for a while, I tend to be comfortable wherever.
No, it's not. If you pride yourself on professional work, you don't need anyone to tell you that you need to stay fit. I think that comes naturally, and if you neglect fitness that's when your performances will drop. I've seen it. Over the last two years, I've just seen a little dip in performance because I wasn't able to train hard. But now, coming out of that, and being able to train a lot harder and have that fitness regime, you see the results as well.
They differ a lot. Obviously, different cultures, different ways of playing cricket, but what remains is that it is the same sort of targets and the way you go about it. The cricket itself doesn't change, but the approach changes. Whereas in some leagues they just preach aggressive, aggressive, aggressive, in others there's a more conservative approach: go hard at the top, consolidate in the middle, go hard again at the end.
"Sammy spoke against the board. Sammy was sacked. Phil Simmons spoke out, got himself sacked. Dwayne Bravo has been in trouble with the board. So if the younger players have seen that trend, they'd rather just stay quiet"
A couple of the years that I played in the English T20 league. We'd go hard and try to consolidate and then go hard again.
The more you have played and the more experience you get, obviously your role changes. When you're a young player you go out there, you dominate attacks, you just go, go, go. You get more senior, there's more responsibility on your shoulders. Sometimes the risk-taking is not as much, whereas in some other situations you have no choice but to go out and take risks.
Now in T20 cricket, I don't mind batting No. 4 or No. 5. I think it gives you flexibility. You lose two quick wickets or three quick wickets, or you come in when the team just needs you to accelerate it in the middle or accelerate at the end. I think that's now my ideal position.
I think there's a sufficient amount of drug-testing. I've had numerous, numerous drug tests all over the world. I don't think you find many cricketers taking drugs and stuff like that. If the people in authority think that they need to have more drug-testing, then so be it. But I haven't seen many cricketers getting banned for drugs. There's a few, but in everything that you do, there's always a few bad apples.
Stats and data - it's there, but I think it's there for more of a baseline. I think if you try to go into too much thinking about stats and the average score on a ground, you sometimes tend to miss a trick. Cricketers should actually play and the stats are just a baseline to see where people are progressing, where you can take advantage of a team, their weaknesses and stuff like that. But if you use too many stats in T20 cricket and start to complicate it, that's when you're in trouble. Stats are good, data is good, but you need to use it sparingly.
It comes naturally. It's just about what you can do, concentration, getting your hand in the right position, and getting some to stick. You can say luck is on your side as well, but if you do it time and time again, it can't be luck.
I'm not surprised that it actually happened. I knew from the time I had a couple bad games or bad series that's what's going to happen and that is what they're going to use against me, because of all that happened between 2014 till now. I had one good series coming back - a very good series as well - and then next time a bad one and then you're out.
That's a question the selection panel will have to answer. I'll be playing cricket around the world and still trying to do the best I can. Will I play for West Indies again? I don't know. You want to use your knowledge and the experience of these guys in order to better West Indies cricket, but I guess the "upper heads", as they call it, and the management at the top have different ideas.
That's one of the things we have been advocating for a long time. So hopefully. But saying you want it or you need it is two different things. Even now, only Test players get retainer contracts.
"West Indies have a rich culture, a rich legacy, so I don't think it's going to collapse"
It's the least of the problems. I think the most important thing is being paid properly for your services. I can rock up and play, but I think there's more to rocking up and playing for West Indies than that. It's about pride, it's about passion, it's about representing. At the end of it all, it's your job. If you're lucky enough to play ten, 15, 20 years at the top, then you would have a substantial career. At the end of the day you've got to live, you'll have kids, get married, and there's a lot more to it than just rocking up and playing.
They won't say it, but they are. Because what you have seen, there's a trend, right? Darren Sammy was regarded as one of the best leaders we have in the Caribbean. Sammy, for the first time, came out and spoke against the board. Sammy was sacked. Phil Simmons wanted different mechanisms to get his job done better. He spoke out against the board, got himself sacked. Dwayne Bravo has been in trouble with the board. Pollard has been in trouble with the board. Chris Gayle has been in trouble with the board for speaking out. So if the younger players have seen that trend, they'd rather just stay quiet. They are learning what not to say because of what the outcome is going to be.
We have to fix it from the top. We have to change the whole system, we have to change the whole culture, we have to change the whole structure. And if you start somewhere, you start at the top, then it filters down.
T20 cricket comes naturally. There are just 20 overs, you go out there and play your natural game for an hour and a half and that's it. It's about concentration, it's about mentality. It's about the wickets you have played on in the West Indies, and then having to go, for instance, to Australia, and try to dominate. When you go overseas, it's difficult to adjust.
Yeah, of course. But look at what happened in 2014 on the India tour. They did an investigation and said the board, the players' association, and the players are culpable for what happened. But what happened after that? The players were the ones sanctioned alone, right? And okay, if you're responsible, you take responsibility for it. You accept it and you try to move forward. But again, we are responsible for everything in West Indies cricket now. That's the way. What are the changes you have seen in the top hierarchy of the WICB? None. But you see the players changing day in, day out.
"Stats and data - it's there for more of a baseline. I think if you try to go into too much thinking about stats and the average score on a ground, you sometimes tend to miss a trick"
At the start, I was. Now I can cope with disappointment. Because of how West Indies cricket is and has been run, sometimes you just get labelled. And when you don't get an opportunity then people will say you can't do it. How would you know if someone can't do something if you don't get an opportunity? I've never got the opportunity to play, but the consensus is that I can't play [Test cricket].
I can see players just wanting to play the short format of the game. But what I will always say, as we were taught growing up, is that Test cricket is the pinnacle. Yes, you want to play the shorter format, but sometimes you still want to test yourself in a longer format. I started playing cricket because I wanted to play West Indies Test matches and 50-over cricket. It just happened that T20 came around and that's what took precedence. When I scored runs in the first-class arena, I was still branded a one-day cricketer, because I was hitting sixes in first-class games. Now, in Test matches you're seeing a lot of sixes as well. So I see it happening, but I still urge them to test themselves in the longer format of the game.
Honestly, I can't see it happening. West Indies have a rich culture, a rich legacy, and I don't think we will let it happen. We have been going through a bad time for the last 20 years or so, but there's always some light at the end of the tunnel. So I don't think it's going to collapse and you're going to see regions go on their own. We just need to get our acts together so West Indies cricket can recover, because we all pride ourselves on that. You can be from Barbados, Trinidad, Guyana, or wherever - you'll be considered a West Indian.
I think it comes naturally to us. We're strong, we're able to hit the balls out of the ground. Where teams run between the wickets and get twos, we get fours and sixes. It works to our advantage. We stick to our strength. Around the world, West Indies go out and try and dominate in the leagues as well. It shows how strong we are. And it was very disappointing to see that we lost 3-0 to Pakistan, because we were so good at it.
When you say "this West Indies team", you have to be specific about which players we are talking about. If we are talking about that World Cup team and a couple of other young players, I definitely think so.
Tim Wigmore is a freelance journalist and author of Second XI: Cricket in its Outposts