
Chris Gayle
 West Indies
 West IndiesOverview
Teams represented
 West Indies
 West Indies ICC World XI
 ICC World XI Jamaica Scorpions
 Jamaica Scorpions Matabeleland Tuskers
 Matabeleland Tuskers PCA Masters XI
 PCA Masters XI Stanford Super Stars
 Stanford Super Stars West Indies A
 West Indies A West Indies Inv XI
 West Indies Inv XI Worcestershire
 Worcestershire University of West Indies Vice Chancellors XI
 University of West Indies Vice Chancellors XI Royal Challengers Bengaluru
 Royal Challengers Bengaluru Kolkata Knight Riders
 Kolkata Knight Riders Punjab Kings
 Punjab Kings Western Australia
 Western Australia West Indies Under-19
 West Indies Under-19 Somerset
 Somerset Lions
 Lions Melbourne Renegades
 Melbourne Renegades Sydney Thunder
 Sydney Thunder Chattogram Challengers
 Chattogram Challengers Dhaka Gladiators
 Dhaka Gladiators Uva Next
 Uva Next Rangpur Riders
 Rangpur Riders Jamaica Tallawahs
 Jamaica Tallawahs St Kitts and Nevis Patriots
 St Kitts and Nevis Patriots Barisal Bulls
 Barisal Bulls Quetta Gladiators
 Quetta Gladiators Karachi Kings
 Karachi Kings Lahore Qalandars
 Lahore Qalandars Cape Town Knight Riders
 Cape Town Knight Riders World XI
 World XI Kerala Knights
 Kerala Knights Vancouver Knights
 Vancouver Knights Balkh Legends
 Balkh Legends Jozi Stars
 Jozi Stars Pokhara Rhinos
 Pokhara Rhinos Team Abu Dhabi
 Team Abu Dhabi Colombo Strikers
 Colombo Strikers Kandy Falcons
 Kandy Falcons Fortune Barishal
 Fortune Barishal World Giants
 World Giants Gujarat Greats
 Gujarat Greats Bangla Tigers Mississauga
 Bangla Tigers Mississauga Morrisville Unity
 Morrisville Unity Premium Windees
 Premium Windees Telangana Tigers
 Telangana Tigers Colombo Lions
 Colombo Lions West Indies Champions
 West Indies Champions Big Boys
 Big Boys West Indies Masters
 West Indies Masters The Pulwama Titans
 The Pulwama TitansBiography
His 'devil may care' style of play has come under harsh criticism on several occasions but with his unparalleled histrionics, Chris Gayle has, time and again proved his critics wrong, and has been the batsman West Indies gamble on for those rollicking starts, at least in the shorter formats of the game.
A regular member in the West Indies youth side, Gayle caught everyone's eye when he cracked a wonderful 141 on their Under-19 tour to Bangladesh and thereafter was hand-picked to represent his hometown , Jamaica, aged just 19. At Jamaica, he grew in stature and just 11 months later, he played his first ODI for the West Indies and consequently made his Test debut six months later. But he succumbed to pressure and after being offered several chances, was dropped. Gayle, however, redeemed himself in 2002 with a double century against New Zealand which was followed by a fantastic away series in India thereby sealing his place in the side. His 317 against South Africa in 2005 was breath-taking and his 2006 Champions Trophy performance provided an icing on the cake. He was offered captaincy in 2007 and the Jamaican did reasonably well with a relatively weak West Indian team at his disposal. In 2009, Gayle displayed two extremely contrasting sides of his personality, scoring an unbeaten 165 in a Test against Australia that took more than seven hours, while smashing the fifth fastest Test century off just 70 balls, in the next match. He followed it up with a triple hundred against Sri Lanka next year, becoming only the fourth batsman to score two triple tons in Tests.
Gayle was drafted in for Dirk Nannes as a mid-season replacement for Bengaluru in the Indian T20 League under controversial circumstances but since then, he has been the undisputed king of Twenty20. The mighty Jamaican became an element of surprise as he single-handedly guided his team all the way to finals. He carried his form in the next edition, once again proving to be an unstoppable force. In the sixth season, 'Gaylestorm' as he is fondly known, smashed the fastest T20 century in the world against Pune off just 30 balls, a record, which only his firepower could pull off. There was no surprise when Bengaluru named him as one of the retained players for 2014, the 7th season. Later on, he moved to Punjab but continued to boss the Indian T20 League in the same way.
One of the hardest hitters of the cricket ball in the modern game, Gayle is known to put opposition bowlers under pressure with his no-holds-barred style of batting. Most dangerous on the off side, Gayle's style is not exactly textbook but he still has a technique which is quite effective to demolish any bowling attack.






 
  
  
 