MUMBAI : Even as Chris Gayle’s fastest World Twenty20 ton hogged the limelight, West Indies coach Phil Simmons acknowledged Marlon Samuels’s effort, saying he took pressure off the swashbuckling Jamaican, who feasted on the English attack in a comprehensive win here.
In their opening World T20 Super 10 Group 1 match at the Wankhede Stadium last night, Gayle wreaked havoc scoring a century off just 47 balls with 11 towering sixes and five boundaries, which helped his side to comfortably chase down the target of 183.
“We all talk about Chris (Gayle) today, but Marlon (Samuels) set up the game today, nicely first, because the way he played, he took a lot of pressure off Chris (Gayle)..And that’s the way we have been trying to get him to play because when he plays like that he is a class act, and if we can get him to play like that in every match, he might get off in every match, but he will get some 70/80s also and he will win games for us and he has to be commended today, the way he took pressure off Chris (Gayle) early,” Simmons said.
Chasing a challenging target, the West Indies romped home in 18.1 overs on the back of Gayle’s bludgeoning innings during which he brought up the fastest century of the World T20 cricket in just 47 balls, to better his own 2007 record of completing a ton in 50 balls.
Simmons said at the post-match press conference, “And that’s the role, he (Samuels) took the pressure off Chris (Gayle) and so Chris could settle in and as I said before if we could get Chris (Gayle) bat in 15 overs in every game, then we will be close enough to win every game.”
Samuels, who walked in at number 3, made a useful 37 off 27 balls, hitting eight fours.(AGENCIES)