Raphick Jumadeen - West Indies - Batsman

Raphick Jumadeen

Raphick Jumadeen

West Indies

Profile

Raphick Jumadeen was a left-arm spinner who played for the West Indies during the 1970s. Not a classical slow bowler by any means, Jumadeen depended more on accuracy to create wicket-taking opportunities. As a result, he rarely ever ripped through a batting line-up, even on favorable surfaces which were few and far in Tests. That happened a fair bit in First-class cricket though where ended up with over 300 scalps at a healthy average and strike rate. His miserly methods often preyed on inexperienced batsmen and at times, even the best of the lot. Unfortunately for Jumadeen, the era he played in didn't encourage too many spinners from West Indies, given the country's fetish with tearaway fast bowlers at that time. Therefore, he endured a short stint in Tests. The World Series League also helped that cause, as star players turned to that for fame and money. His debut game was historical, bowling 31 maidens in his 64 overs, conceding at just 1 run-per-over. After his playing days, Jumadeen became a national selector.

Written by Hariprasad Sadanandan

Personal Information

Born

April 12, 1948 (76 years)

Birth Place

Harmony Hall, Gasparillo, Trinidad

Height

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Role

Batsman

Batting Style

Right Handed Bat

Bowling Style

Left-arm orthodox

ICC Rankings

 

Test

ODI

T20

Batting

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Bowling

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Batting Career Summary
M Inn NO Runs HS Avg BF SR 100 200 50 4s 6s
Test 12 14 10 84 56 21.0 21 0.0 0 0 1 2 0
Bowling Career Summary
M Inn B Runs Wickets BBI BBM Econ Avg SR 5w 10w
Test 12 22 3140 1141 29 4/72 6/162 2.18 39.34 108.28 0 0