Nurse does mum proud
At 16, Martin Nurse is already living part of his life-long dream and making good on a promise he made to his mother when she was alive
David Hinds
30-Dec-2001
At 16, Martin Nurse is already living part of his life-long
dream and making good on a promise he made to his mother
when she was alive.
He has put the early trauma of losing his mother at just 11
years old behind him and moved on to become one of the
youngest players to be named to the island's senior cricket
team.
My mother always supported me and I know if she were still
here she would be proud of me.
From young I always told her that I wanted to play cricket
for Barbados and, hopefully, the West Indies, he said.
The Deighton Griffith Secondary School student has been
raised mostly by his older brother, Mark, who, he said,
really pushed him to go after his dream.
I am really excited and happy to be playing with some of the
older members of the team and the guys have all supported
me, said the quiet youngster.
I honestly didn't feel I did that great during the trials,
but I still felt like I had a chance of making the team.
I was surprised but happy when I heard I had been selected.
All of my friends and family said they were proud of me and
hope I do well.
My ultimate dream, of course, is to one day play for the
West Indies, said the left-handed opening batsman.
Nurse has been on a high since hearing the news and,
yesterday, the confidence showed as he strutted out on the
Emmerton Playing Field next to Barbados captain Sherwin
Campbell in the Emmerton Tapeball Cricket Competition.
The fifth-form student was the leading Division 1 batsman
this season with 737 runs, including a century his second at
that level.
The first was a match-saving knock for Combined Schools
against Spartan in Queen's Park on his debut.
He was a late bloomer, never seriously taking up the game
until he reached secondary school. Even then, the resident
of Foursquare, St Philip, was never a part of the national
Under-15 or Under-19 teams.
But a strong will and determination has seen him leapfrog
over many players who were elevated while he had to sit back
and watch.
He creates history by becoming the first player to make the
senior side while still a junior, without making the
Under-19 team.
He will, however, not be in Barbados for the season-opener.
He leaves on January 8 for a three-week stint in Australia,
where he will attend the Bradman Coaching School in Sydney,
and other camps in Melbourne.
From there it's all in his hands.