They came to see Chris Gayle, instead they had to settle for watching the future of West Indies batting.
Gayle was supposed to be the story at Headingley, playing his final World Cup match. A pair of tantalizing landmarks were within reach. Brian Lara’s record number of one-day runs for the West Indies would be beaten with a score of 18. If he reached 47 he would overhaul Lara as the Windies’ record run-getter in World Cups.
A nick behind off the bowling of Dawlat Zadran when on just seven ended his hopes of breaking either but Gayle’s impact will not be remembered for the numbers.
During a time where West Indian cricket has struggled to hit the heights of the great teams of the 1970s and 1980s, he has been more than just a great entertainer at the top of the order. You just needed to watch the acclaim of the Indian fans before he took to the field against them at Old Trafford to understand Gayle’s global appeal.
He has inspired the next generation in the Caribbean and there was tangible proof on show in Leeds. This team no longer relies on Gayle to set a target. He departed early but those who followed him carried the team past 300.
The World Cup has not gone as West Indies would have hoped but the seeds have been sown and may flower in four years’ time in India.
It started with Evin Lewis, not quite a facsimile of Gayle, but the closest copy the West Indies currently have. Lewis has the ability to score big hundreds, the prime example being his 176 not out against England at The Oval two years ago.
Here, he smashed a couple of sixes, including one beauty off his hips on the way to 58. If Lewis is a batsman in the mould of the Universe Boss, the same cannot be said of Shai Hope. Coming in at three, the wicket-keeper batsman anchored the innings on his way to 77.
In many ways this Windies batting line-up is hit and Hope. Everyone else hits, and Hope holds it all together. The 25-year-old was involved in two fifty partnerships, first adding 88 with Lewis, then 65 with Shimron Hetmyer.
Hetmyer is another prodigious striker and hit 39 off 31 in a glorious cameo that left the crowd wanting more. With four ODI hundreds already to his name at just 22, they will get it, if not in this World Cup.
Then came Nicholas Pooran, a revelation from a Windies’ perspective. He added a second half-century of the tournament to the stunning hundred he scored last time out against Sri Lanka.
That quartet are the future but of course Gayle being Gayle, he was not going to bid farewell to the grandest of stages without a final flourish.
The great showman might have failed with the bat, but a diving catch and then a crucial wicket broke two potentially match-winning partnerships and ensured he finished with a win.
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