Meet Nicholas Pooran, child of franchise cricket

The West Indies dasher who made a mark at the World Cup might be the first player to come to the big time under the mentorship of the first generation of Caribbean T20 guns for hire

Jarrod Kimber06-Sep-2019Trinidad, late in 2017. Nicholas Pooran is in Sunil Narine’s house to hang out. With him is his mentor Kieron Pollard, and Dwayne Bravo. It’s Trinidad T20 royalty. At this stage Pooran is barely known other than to close watchers of the CPL or to people who follow random T20 drafts. But his fellow Trini mates know all about him.Pollard tells him to learn how to bat by playing first-class cricket. It is Pollard who found Pooran an agent and got him to play franchise cricket while still little more than an ESPNcricinfo profile. But it is Bravo who gives him advice that changes everything.”Dwayne was telling me, ‘Pooran, you can still learn from franchise cricket, man. You just have to learn quickly, stop making the same mistakes over and over. And you have to know what you want as a cricketer.'”From that day, I sat down, talking to my girlfriend and parents, and when I realised what I really wanted, that helped me a lot. I was fortunate to get the opportunity to play, and gradually I started improving.”The last two years, that was a process of my development. Not every young player gets these opportunities, but I could understand different cultures, different conditions, and learn from different people. Two years ago I didn’t know my strengths as a batsman, or my role in teams or situations. Now I am starting to put it together. Now I understand when I need to play a certain way, and what shots to play when, and it’s working out for me. But I didn’t happen overnight. From 20 to 23.”ALSO READ: How Nicholas Pooran came back from the brinkAt 23, with three first-class games to his name, Pooran became a marquee player for Guyana Amazon Warriors, was sold for Rs 4.2 crore (about US$590,000) to Kings XI Punjab, batted No. 4 in a World Cup, and made his first ever professional hundred.It didn’t happen overnight, but like many of his innings, it happened fast. Nicholas Pooran is a child of franchise cricket.***”When I woke up from the accident, the cast was on my leg. I couldn’t move my toes. I knew it was bad. I asked the doctor if I could play cricket again. They weren’t sure if I’d be able to run again, and my blood pressure went straight up, as all these things went running through my mind. But I kept believing.”That was how Pooran described the few minutes when he woke up after a car crash in 2015. He has been keen to move on from being the player known as a survivor of a car accident in which he suffered a torn patella tendon, fractured tibia and fractured ankle.