When he reinvented himself near the start of the last decade, he ended up setting a template for an era of West Indies T20 cricket

Osman Samiuddin08-Nov-2021Chris Gayle is half-retired, and given how cricketers do it these days, there’s probably no better description of his status. Maybe he gets one last game for West Indies. Maybe he features in some high-profile setting somewhere. Maybe we don’t see him again. Exits are never clean anymore, in which case, let’s call this a half-goodbye.And let’s begin with this fact: that sometime in the latter half of the last decade, Gayle ceased to be a cricketer. He became, instead, an event and nothing other than the main event either. Life would be happening and suddenly, without warning, Christopher Henry was in the house; more accurately perhaps, we were in his.Could be West Indies, could be Kings XI, could be Renegades, but they’d be on, say, 60 in under four overs, 100 in less than 10, or 200 in 16 and Gayle would be at the wheel: 50 off 12, 60 off 30, 150 off 50, ludicrous off ridiculous. Life as a series of double takes.