Stuart Williams (cricketer)


Stuart Clayton Williams is a former West Indian cricketer. One of the opening batsmen tried after the retirement of Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes, Williams was a batsman who never made the number of runs expected of him at the highest level.

Domestic career

While playing first class cricket in the West Indies domestic competition he fractured a figure which later became infected and had to be amputated. He returned to First-class cricket the following year and topped his team's batting average with 339 runs at 54.83. This was his final season and he subsequently retired.
In June 2018, he was named as one of the two team coaches of the Cricket West Indies B Team squad for the inaugural edition of the Global T20 Canada tournament.

International career

Williams scored one test century and three half centuries in a career spanning eight years from 1994 to 2002. Prolific at First Class level, he was a joy to watch though his innings in test cricket were all too brief despite flashes of brilliant stroke play.
His lone century, a gutsy 128 on a deteriorating Port of Spain wicket, helped West Indies draw the second Test against India in 1997. It proved a fateful innings as the regional team went on to win the series 1-0.
Later that season, Williams and Sherwin Campbell added 160 for the first wicket in a successful fourth innings chase of 189 against Sri Lanka at St Johns. It remains the second highest fourth innings opening stand for the West Indies and the 12th highest in Test history. The team won the series 1-0.
Williams and Campbell formed the Caribbean team’s sixth most successful opening pair in Tests at the time, yielding 868 runs over 27 innings. They have since been bumped down to tenth.
Following a three year absence from Test cricket, he forced his way back into the team by topping the 2002 Busta Cup averages with 722 runs at 72.20. It would prove a false dawn as he managed just 91 runs in three Tests against the visiting Indians, bringing the curtain down on his Test career at age 32. His final Test average of 24.14 fell well below his First Class mark of 40.67.
Williams found more success in ODIs, tallying 1586 runs at an average of 32. A purple patch of 677 runs in 11 games between 1997 and 1998 carried him to a career best of 16th in the ICC Rankings though his form declined afterwards. His streak included innings of 76, 78*, 90, 5, 26, 75, 77, 22, 105*, 55 and 68.
He along with Shivnarine Chanderpaul set the record for the highest ever opening stand for West Indies in ODIs It has since been overtaken.