Sammy was the first player from St Lucia to represent the West Indies Test side, making his debut as a 23-year-old in 2007 against England at Old Trafford. He took 7 for 66
in the second innings of a 60-run loss to the home side, the best
bowling figures at Old Trafford since Malcolm Marshall claimed 7 for 22
in 1988. They were also the best for any West Indian on debut since Alf
Valentine claimed 8 for 102 against England at the same venue in 1950
and would remain Sammy's best haul over his 38 Tests.
After having played only eight Tests, he was made captain of the Test side taking over
from Chris Gayle in October 2010 after Gayle turned down a WICB central
contract. It was a curious move at the time since Sammy was not an
automatic selection due to his modest record with both bat and ball,
claiming 27 wickets at 27.74 while maintaining a batting average of
19.40 with high score of 48 in 15 innings.
Sammy fought off plenty of criticism throughout his reign during which
West Indies won eight, lost 12 and drew 10 of the Tests he captained.
During a seven-month stretch beginning in November 2011, West Indies
lost three consecutive three-match series - in India, at home to
Australia and then away again in England - all by a final margin of 2-0.
The WICB continued to show faith in Sammy's leadership though and they
were rewarded when he led them to six straight Test victories - two each
at home against New Zealand, away in Bangladesh and back home against
Zimbabwe - before a poor showing by the West Indies in India during
Sachin Tendulkar's farewell series last November provided more fodder
for Sammy's detractors. His final series in charge was in New Zealand
last December where Darren Bravo's double-century saved the first Test
in Dunedin before West Indies lost heavily in the final two matches of
the series.
He leaves Test cricket at a time when his Twenty20 career is near its
peak. After leading West Indies to the World T20 title in 2012, he led
them to the semifinals in 2014 on the back of some impressive finishing
displays, none more than against Australia when he scored 34 not out off
13 balls in a final-over six-wicket win.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
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