The revolution Kieron Pollard led

He was the first of the T20 freelancers, blazing a trail for the many who followed

Deivarayan Muthu04-Mar-20201:45

Kieron Pollard – The T20 behemoth

September 22, 2010: Kieron Pollard makes the eyebrow-raising decision to turn down a West Indies central contract in order to become a T20 freelancer. He’s just 23. It positively offends some people; Michael Holding, for one, lays into Pollard, saying he is “not a cricketer”.In a way, Holding is right. Pollard is unlike anything the world had seen before. And he has been more than just a cricketer. He has been a true pioneer, a T20 trailblazer. When T20 was still in its infancy and the future seemed unclear, he dared to give up the security of a central contract, instead choosing to back his incredible all-round skills and fitness to lead the way.If a growing number of people feel they can forego a national contract and make a living off of T20 leagues, they have Pollard to thank. To name just a couple: One of Pollard’s team-mates at Mumbai Indians, Mitchell McClenaghan, did just that in 2017. And more recently, 20-year old Afghanistan fast bowler Naveen-ul-Haq, who went toe to toe against Pollard in Lucknow last year, expressed a desire to evolve into a T20 specialist.Pollard himself, having been there and done that at (nearly) every T20 – and T10 – competition in the world, is now set to become the first player to get to 500 T20s, against Sri Lanka in Pallekele. . And oh, he’s a mere 34 runs away from joining Chris Gayle in reaching 10,000 runs in T20 cricket.ALSO READ: This is Pollard’s West Indies and they mean businessSo where did it all begin?Pollard made his maiden T20 appearance in the Stanford tournament, all the way back in 2006. He hadn’t played first-class or even List A cricket at the time. And the likes of Ricardo Powell and Mervyn Dillon were playing alongside him – that’s how long ago it was.