The Daily Telegraph - Sport

‘Universe boss’ Gayle happy to be T20 king

West Indies power hitter is modern game’s ultimate gun for hire and party animal – but even he needs a break

- By Tim Wigmore

It must be exhausting being the “Universe Boss”. When we meet, Chris Gayle is lying down on a sofa in a lounge in a London hotel room; throughout our interview, his sunglasses remain squarely on.

Gayle long ago made the transition from mere sportsman to performati­ve celebrity, a man who – for good or bad – often seems to act as he does because it is how he is expected to. If you believe his Instagram feed, the main challenge in his life is telling where one party ends and the next begins. No one has been more associated with the life of the Twenty20 freelance cricketer; no one, certainly, has done more to glamorise it.

Yet, for all the bravado and thirdperso­n references to the Universe Boss, perception and reality are very different. The T20 circuit is a world in which even being a name as big as Gayle brings no guarantees – which explains why he is in London, promoting a new app called All Rounders, offering coaching tips to children, rather than playing in the Indian Premier League.

“These days the game’s changed so much,” he says while remaining lying down. “It’s more of a business. Nobody’s loyal to you.

“You just have to know what you’re involved in so when that time comes you’re not necessaril­y going to get hit hard and say I had my trust in you, I was loyal to you. It’s just the way it is right now.”

Even before Covid curtailed players’ freedoms, Gayle long ago grew tired of the drudgery of living in hotel rooms. “It can be a miniprison. Even when you go back home you’re still living out of your suitcase because you’ve been doing that for 20-odd years. That’s the struggle,” he says.

From James Anderson to Tom Brady, Cristiano Ronaldo to the Williams sisters, sport is in an age when the very best athletes are enjoying longer careers than their predecesso­rs. Gayle is not often put in this company, but he should be: he made his internatio­nal debut last century and turns 43 in September.

He puts his longevity down to his mental strength and capacity to respond to failure. “If you watch my career it’s a lot of failures more than success over the 20 years,” he says. “As a cricketer you have to understand you’ll fail more than you succeed. It’s tough, man. That’s why I’m saying if you’re not mentally strong you’ll walk away from the game. If you’re not performing well, it’s even tougher.

“But you have to embrace it – accept it and tell yourself you will bounce back and come back stronger. You’ve got to know how to pull through these moments.”

The other reason why Gayle has been around so long, of course, is that he is so good. The best measure of his quality is a record that he uniquely owns – the 3-2-1: a Test match triple century (actually, two), a one-day internatio­nal double century, and a T20 internatio­nal century (two, again).

Asked which of these numbers he treasures most, he replies: “The triple century, obviously – it’s hard work to bat for a day and a half.”

In T20, Gayle has often worn shirt number 333, his highest Test score. He recounts how that innings in Sri Lanka in 2010 was particular­ly satisfying because, on his previous tour there, he had been dismissed five times out of six by left-armer Chaminda Vaas: such powers of recall give a hint of Gayle’s deep fount of cricketing wisdom.

Gayle the Test cricketer is often overlooked. Yet he played 103 Tests, scoring 7,214 runs at an average of 42.18 – more runs, at a higher average, than his near-contempora­ry Sir Andrew Strauss. “Most people know where I stand when it comes to all formats,” Gayle says. “They say I’m the king of Twenty20s so if you’re the king, be the king of something.”

No one understand­s more than Gayle how to score a T20 century. He has 22 of them; no one else has mustered more than eight, which explains why Gayle is known as the “Bradman of T20”. However tempting it is to explain away these centuries by his capacity to hit sixes alone, the truth is more complex. It was through learning to give himself time that Gayle found a way to combine his rapid scoring with remarkable consistenc­y.

“When T20 started, we were pretty much trying to hit from ball one. In some innings you get in the rhythm but sometimes you give yourself a chance and see what’s happening. You have more time than you think – and you can make it up as well. It’s good to have a set batter in the back end. The game awareness is very critical as well, knowing when to go and when to hold back.”

Gayle embraces dot balls at the start of his innings: he plays out more dot balls in the first 10 deliveries of an innings than any batsman in T20 history. It is a game of high stakes, and occasional­ly it can go wrong – in the 2012 T20 World Cup final, he scored three off 16 balls. But the trade-off is that, when he is set, he has an unrivalled capacity to bend an innings to his will, regardless of where the fielders are. “Where I’m even more dominant is after the sixth over. After the powerplay, most players tend to slow down a bit. I still can be more explosive because that’s when the main spinners will come on,” he says.

But Gayle is notably piqued when discussing the new tactical tendency for teams to move him down to No 3, borne of trying to maximise his potency against spin. “That’s absolutely rubbish; how can you have the No1 player batting at No3?”

Thirteen years ago, Gayle was equally disparagin­g of Test cricket, saying he would “not be so sad” if it died. Now, he speaks passionate­ly when asked if countries such as the West Indies need more support from the Internatio­nal Cricket Council and the wealthiest nations.

“Absolutely. The only people who are really benefiting is Australia, England, India – those are the top tier when it comes to Test cricket. Like Bangladesh, Zimbabwe, we need to grow them a bit more – those guys get, like, one Test match here and there. They’re treating it as a business when India play against England, Australia, it’s big bucks for them. But we – the lower-ranked teams – need to be looked after.”

You sense that it might not be easy for Gayle to leave the stage. He wants to play for two more years. “The body feels good and the mind still feels good. I’m still seeing properly,” he says with a laugh. “I’ve still got the urge and passion to play.” Curiously, he plans to take most of the year off – a sabbatical aged 42 – but then play until he is 45.

What will come after retirement is intriguing. Commentary, Gayle says, is not for him; indeed, he does not want to discuss his derogatory comments to a female journalist in Australia in 2016. Coaching does not appeal. But Gayle still intends to remain in the sport in another way, imparting the knowledge gleaned from his twin T20 World Cup wins in 2012 and 2016.

“I’d love to mentor cricketers – educate them how to be mentally tough,” he says. “I’ll try my best to guide them on the right path. Sometimes they don’t feel things are going according to plan and need to talk to somebody to make sure they’re mentally ready.”

Asked what he would tell his younger self, Gayle chuckles. “I wouldn’t change anything. Advice – keep being who you are, always be true to yourself, never try to cheat the sport, keep it very simple.”

The Cricket All Rounders app, featuring coaching tips from profession­als including Chris Gayle and James Anderson, and aimed at children aged 8-15, is available to download now.

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 ?? ?? High roller: Chris Gayle hits England for six (right); at last year’s T20 World Cup in Abu Dhabi (bottom right); and dancing this year during the second England Test at Bridgetown
High roller: Chris Gayle hits England for six (right); at last year’s T20 World Cup in Abu Dhabi (bottom right); and dancing this year during the second England Test at Bridgetown
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