Ashley Nurse

  • Dec 22, 1988 (34 years)
  • Gibbons, Christ Church, Barbados
  • Right-hand bat
  • Right-arm offbreak
Player Batting Status
  M Inn NO Runs HS Avg SR 100 200 50 4s 6s
ODI 54 40 14 502 44 19.31 97.86 0 0 0 44 12
T20I 13 8 6 85 20 42.5 119.72 0 0 0 7 3
Player Bowling Status
  M Inn B Runs Wkts BBI BBM Econ Avg SR 5W 10W
54 49 2384 2125 49 4/51 4/51 5.35 43.37 48.65 0 0
13 13 240 317 8 2/6 2/6 7.92 39.62 30.0 0 0
Biography

Cricketing world is replete with prodigies turning into stars or a tale of heroic comebacks, and the former has seen many Caribbean players being clubbed into that league. Ashley Nurse neither belonged to the former category nor did he make any rip-roaring noise after making his List-A debut for Guyana in 2007, which turned out to be anything but satisfying, but he certainly was one of those cricketers who toiled hard to reach where he is now.

After a not-so-magnanimous debut, the offie kept on playing his trade in the West Indian domestic competitions, which led to his T20I debut against Pakistan in April 2011. Failure against the visiting Indian and Pakistani teams meant he was out of the reckoning for long despite securing a match haul of 14 for 40 in a regional four-day competition in 2013 to help Barbados get the better of Windward Islands by a huge margin of an innings and 101 runs.

But pretty much like the ironic tales of many successful domestic cricketers, Nurse had fallen behind the time and failed to translate his domestic performances at the international level. While the Barbadian remained a key component in his regional team’s jigsaw, Sunil Narine and Samuel Badree grew in stature to be a force to be reckoned with for the Windies and sent Nurse down the pecking order.

After seeing his career move southwards, Nurse pulled up his socks in the 2016 edition of Caribbean Premier League and eventually made his ODI debut against Sri Lanka in Harare in 2016 - the same series that saw Shai Hope and Rovman Powell also making their ODI debut. He picked up three wickets on his debut to decisively turn this match in the team’s favour which was hugely appreciated by the modest Harare crowd. Since then, he has been a regular in Windies limited-overs team and was one of the key members in the team’s successful World Cup qualifier campaign in early 2018.