Personal Information

Full Name Ryan O'Neal Hinds
Born February 17, 1981 Holders Hill, St James
Age 43 Years, 10 Months, 9 Days
National Side West Indies
Batting Style Left Handed
Bowling Slow left-arm orthodox
Sport Cricket

Ranking

Test ODI T20
Batting - - -
Bowling - - -

Man of the Match

Test ODI T20 World Cup CL
0 0 - - -

Career Information

Teams Played West Indies, Barbados, West Indies A, West Indies Inv XI, Combined Campuses and Colleges, Young West Indies, West Indies Under-19
Career Span

Ryan O'Neal Hinds Overall Stats

Batting & Fielding Performance

M I N/O R HS 100s 50s 4s 6s AVG S/R CT ST Ducks R/O
Test
15 25 1 505 84 v ENG 0 2 61 2 21.04 40.56 7 0
ODI
14 9 3 101 18* v NZ 0 0 11 0 16.83 59.41 2 0

Bowling Performance

I O M R W Best 3s 5s AVG E/R S/R Mtc
Test
22 290.3 54 870 13 2/45 v ENG 0 0 66.92 2.99 134.07
ODI
12 67.5 0 350 6 2/19 v NZ 0 0 58.33 5.15 67.83

Ryan O'Neal Hinds Profile

Born in Barbados, Ryan Hinds has been a Barbadian and West Indian middle order, all rounder for some time now. In fact, as a teenager, he has had a lot of success playing for first class cricket and also the Youth World Cup. As a first class cricketer, he went on to scalp fifteen wickets in a match against Leeward Islands, and some years later in 2005-06 he entered the record books by becoming the first ever player from Barbados to score a hundred in each inning of a first class match – incidentally again, against the Leeward Islands.

However, even before this, he had made his debut for his country, Barbados in the 1998 Commonwealth Games, the only time cricket has ever been played in the Commonwealth Games. After this, he also went on to captain the West Indies team in the 2000 Youth World Cup. With the great West Indian opener Desmond Haynes describing him as having the best technique in the Caribbean, it was only natural that he got selected for the National side, which he did when he played his first ODI against Zimbabwe at Kandy. He scored an unbeaten 16 in a match that his team won with consummate ease. With the matches at Pakistan getting shifted to Sharjah, he made his Test debut at this unlikely venue against Pakistan, hitting a 62 and an unbeaten 9, yet his team lost.

In 2007, he was involved in a very feisty first class match where he showed his dissent as a captain. Fortunately for him, he was let off on technical grounds. However, since then he has taken a break from first class cricket citing mental exhaustion.