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Trishan Holder Jersy
Trishan Holder
Team flagCAR21 yrs
batting styleAll Rounder

Trishan Holder Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Trishan Holder Recent Form

Batting

BAR-W vs WWI-W, T2010 (15)
BAR-W vs JAM-W, T200 (1)
BAR-W vs GY-W, T2013 (30)
BAR-W vs LWI-W, T206 (13)
BAR-W vs TT-W, T201 (3)
BR-W vs TKR-W, CPL1 (1) *
BR-W vs TKR-W, CPL4 (5)
WI-W vs PAK-W, T20I1 (2) *
WIWU19 vs ENWU19, Under 190 (3)
WIWU19 vs RWA-U19'W, Under 191 (2)
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Trishan Holder Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
T20I9635002151.477.0020----
CPL22500483.335.0000----
T205530001348.396.0030----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
T20I9000.000.000000.00----
CPL2000.000.000000.00----
T205000.000.000000.00----

Teams played for

Barbados Women

About Trishan Holder

NameTrishan Holder
GenderFemale
Birth8 Nov 2003
NationalityCaribbean
RoleAll Rounder
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsright-arm medium . Spinner

It was a humid afternoon in Bridgetown when the ball arched high into the sky, shadows stretching long over the outfield. The crowd’s murmur shifted to a collective gasp as a teenager, still in her school colours, judged the catch beneath the descending ball. Hands steady, eyes fixed, she clutched it cleanly, a moment of composure far beyond her years. That small act, performed in a local women’s game in Barbados, was the spark of something larger. For those watching, it wasn’t just a catch. It was the arrival of Trishan Holder, a player who would soon carry the hopes of a new generation of West Indian women’s cricket.... continue reading

Player Bio

It was a humid afternoon in Bridgetown when the ball arched high into the sky, shadows stretching long over the outfield. The crowd’s murmur shifted to a collective gasp as a teenager, still in her school colours, judged the catch beneath the descending ball. Hands steady, eyes fixed, she clutched it cleanly, a moment of composure far beyond her years. That small act, performed in a local women’s game in Barbados, was the spark of something larger. For those watching, it wasn’t just a catch. It was the arrival of Trishan Holder, a player who would soon carry the hopes of a new generation of West Indian women’s cricket.

Born in November 2003, Trishan is among the youngest of the players to break into the Caribbean cricket scene in recent years. Her rise is emblematic of a shifting tide in regional cricket, one where teenage girls are no longer just spectators of the men’s game but are forging their own identities on the pitch. For Holder, cricket was not a choice made casually. It was a passion she inherited from the culture around her, from the rhythm of Caribbean afternoons where cricket bats outnumbered skipping ropes, and from family encouragement that pushed her toward organised play from a very young age.

Holder’s first brush with the international spotlight came in 2023, when she represented the West Indies Under-19 Women’s team at the inaugural ICC U19 Women’s T20 World Cup in South Africa. The tournament was historic, the first of its kind, and Holder was part of a squad that symbolised the future of Caribbean cricket. She may not have been the leading run-scorer, but her role as a composed batter in the middle order gave glimpses of her temperament. Facing quality attacks from India and England, she stood tall, crafting innings that were less about flamboyance and more about grit. “She has the kind of calm presence you can build a batting unit around,” remarked a regional coach during the tournament, summing up the quality that distinguished her even then.

Her batting style is rooted in timing rather than brute force. She favours the off-side, her cover drive already a signature shot, and she has consistently shown the ability to rotate the strike, a trait often underappreciated in younger players. Coaches have often praised her game awareness, particularly her knack for pacing an innings. She is not yet the six-hitter who will take down spinners with slog sweeps, but she has the foundation of a long-format player who can also adapt to the speed of T20s.

What stands out about Holder is her composure in pressure situations. In one of her domestic T20 outings for Barbados Women, she walked in at 25 for 3, the opposition bowlers running riot. Instead of panicking, she stitched together a patient 31, nudging singles, punishing only the loose balls, and gradually steadying the innings. Barbados lost narrowly that day, but Holder’s knock was described as the most “mature innings of the match.” It was a reminder that sometimes talent is measured not in fireworks but in the ability to calm a storm.

Holder has also shown herself to be an excellent fielder, agile and quick across the turf, and safe under high balls. Her fielding has already earned her opportunities in the Women’s Caribbean Premier League (WCPL), where she turned out for the Barbados Royals Women. In the franchise setup, surrounded by seasoned internationals like Hayley Matthews and Chinelle Henry, Holder absorbed lessons quickly. One of the Royals’ coaches noted, “She’s like a sponge, everything you tell her, she tries to apply immediately. That’s rare in players so young.”

The exposure to professional franchise cricket has been invaluable. Batting alongside established stars, Holder has learned the importance of intent, especially in the powerplay overs. While she has yet to deliver a breakout innings on that stage, her cameos, a 22 off 17 against the Trinbago Knight Riders Women, for instance, showed glimpses of the gears she is adding to her game.

Still, the path ahead is one of growth. Holder’s numbers suggest room for improvement in converting starts into bigger scores. Too often, she has fallen in her 20s or 30s after doing the hard work. But for a 20-year-old still navigating professional cricket, that is as much a sign of potential as it is of limitation. With continued exposure, those 30s are likely to become match-winning 60s.

Beyond the stats, Holder embodies the hunger of a new generation of Caribbean cricketers who have grown up watching both the triumphs and struggles of West Indies cricket. She has spoken candidly about wanting to inspire younger girls in Barbados to take up the sport. “When I was ten, I didn’t know if there was a place for girls in cricket,” she said in a post-match interview in 2024. “Now, when I walk out in Royals colours, I know I’m showing them that there is.” That awareness, that her presence itself is part of a larger movement, adds a layer of responsibility to her career.

Her personality off the pitch reflects the same balance she shows with the bat. Soft-spoken but determined, she spends much of her downtime watching videos of successful women cricketers, studying techniques, and visualising scenarios. She has cited Hayley Matthews as both a role model and mentor, noting how Matthews’s journey from teenage prodigy to global star serves as a roadmap. The mentorship is fitting: Matthews debuted for the West Indies at just 16, and Holder, following in her footsteps, represents the next chapter.

For the West Indies, nurturing players like Holder is crucial. The women’s team has often struggled with depth in its batting, relying heavily on a few stars. Holder’s progression into a consistent middle-order option could be transformative. She brings not just batting stability but also youthful energy and fielding excellence, areas where the team has sometimes lagged behind stronger sides, such as Australia and England.

Looking forward, the immediate goal for Holder is to establish her place in the WCPL and regional setups, building the kind of performances that make her a strong candidate for full international selection. The West Indies selectors, known for keeping a close eye on emerging talent, will surely take note of her development. If she can add more power-hitting to her game while retaining her natural composure, she could evolve into the versatile batter the side so badly needs.

Trishan Holder’s story, then, is less about instant stardom and more about steady ascent. She is not the teenage sensation who announced herself with a whirlwind hundred, but the patient builder, the quiet contributor, the one who takes small steps that add up to something larger. And sometimes, those are the careers that last longest, because they are built not on flashes of brilliance but on strong, enduring foundations.

As she walks out to bat in 2025, the sun often setting behind the palm trees that ring Caribbean grounds, Holder carries both her bat and the invisible weight of expectation. Yet she does not seem burdened. Much like that first catch she took as a schoolgirl in Bridgetown, she meets the moment with steady hands and a calm gaze, a sign that her story is still only beginning.

(As of August 2025)