ST JOHN'S ANTIGUA, AUGUST 4 2006
- Tonito Willett has always been considered to be bountifully talented.
Since his youth cricket days many were expecting him to progress into
the West Indies senior team with
relative ease. Things did not work out exactly that way for him as he
has had an indifferent time at the regional level.
The
23 year old seems to be taking a serious liking for 20/20 cricket in
its inaugural year under the Stanford 20/20 brand. In his second
innings he produced a mind-boggling gem to dispose of Antigua, the hometown favourites.
The
battle was set up as a grudge game between neighbours Antigua and
Nevis, the dominant cricketing force in the Federation of St Kitts and Nevis.
The focus was on the more notable names such as Stuart Williams, Ridley
Jacobs, Dave Jopseh and Gavin Tonge. Willett, with a violent burst of
batting stole the attention away with venom.
Nevis
lost the toss but Jacobs asked them to bat first. They knew that with a
huge vocal local crowd and an eager Antiguan batting line up, they
would need to put something substantial on the board for Antigua
to chase. They started in a glorious blaze, getting 42 in four overs
and 84 in eight overs by the time they lost the second wicket and
Willett entered the fray. When many thought the show was coming to a
close they were rudely kept galvanized to the action by Willett’s power
hitting display.
All told he struck eight fours and five sixes and faced 44 balls. The result? 86 unbeaten runs that catapulted Nevis to the highest score of the tournament – 213 for 3 from 20 overs.
It
was an awesome display, even if the Antiguan bowlers gave him width and
an unchallenging length. Willett, as those who watched him when he was
much younger knew he was capable of, pounded bowler after bowler to
distant parts. Had the overs not run out he would have certainly gone
on to register the tournament’s first century as the innings itself was
enough to knock Antigua out cold.
They
responded with a fight but only got as far as 170 for 9 from their 20
overs. The difference was Willett, the wristy right hander who played
shots from the very inception of his innings as if his life depended on
runs piling up on the board.
The
first two balls he faced from pacer Curtis Roberts were dispatched for
four, two balls later another four flowed. Twice he hit Deryck Edwards
for consecutive fours and the rest of bowlers came in for their share
of licks intermittently.
Willett
hangs on to the record for the highest individual score of the
tournament and his innings, without doubt, is one of the most
enjoyable, exciting and enthralling innings played not only in the
Stanford 20/20 Tournament but in any 20/20 tournament.