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Quentin Sampson Jersy
Quentin Sampson
Team flagCAR25 yrs
batting styleright handed Batter

Quentin Sampson Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Quentin Sampson Recent Form

Batting

GAW vs SLK, CPL17 (17)
GAW vs BR, CPL50 (36)
GAW vs SLK, CPL76 (39)
GAW vs ABF, CPL19 (15)
GAW vs SKNP, CPL14 (7) *
GAW vs TKR, CPL7 (4)
GAW vs BR, CPL33 (20) *
GAW vs TKR, CPL25 (19)
GRR vs BBP, T2043 (25) *
GRR vs LIT, T2017 (10) *

Bowling

GRR vs JMT, T200-18
GRR vs TTL, T200-30
GRR vs WII, T200-12
GUY vs WIA, LIST A0-42

Quentin Sampson Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
CPL882410276153.5040.171816----
LIST A22130013100.006.5011----
T2055890043161.8229.6785----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
CPL8000.000.000000.00----
LIST A21010.500.000/42000.00----
T205308.570.000/12000.00----

Teams played for

Guyana Harpy Eagles

About Quentin Sampson

NameQuentin Sampson
GenderMale
Birth4 Aug 2000
NationalityCaribbean
RoleBatter
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsright-arm medium fast . Faster

The Caribbean is filled with stories of young cricketers chasing the rhythm of bat and ball in community grounds, their dreams stitched to the sound of calypso and the weight of regional legacy. Quentin Sampson’s journey begins in that very tapestry, a young Antiguan cricketer born in 2005, whose rise into the professional scene has been steady, deliberate, and quietly compelling. Still at the threshold of his twenties, Sampson embodies both the exuberance of youth and the discipline needed to make cricket more than a pastime.... continue reading

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Player Bio

The Caribbean is filled with stories of young cricketers chasing the rhythm of bat and ball in community grounds, their dreams stitched to the sound of calypso and the weight of regional legacy. Quentin Sampson’s journey begins in that very tapestry, a young Antiguan cricketer born in 2005, whose rise into the professional scene has been steady, deliberate, and quietly compelling. Still at the threshold of his twenties, Sampson embodies both the exuberance of youth and the discipline needed to make cricket more than a pastime.

Unlike many of his peers who first made headlines with six-hitting sprees in local leagues, Sampson’s cricketing education was built on patience and structure. Growing up in Antigua, he represented school teams with a maturity that set him apart. Coaches noticed his ability to absorb pressure, whether as a batter digging in against hostile bowling or as a fielder putting his body on the line. He wasn’t just playing cricket; he was studying it, learning angles, adjusting strokes, and observing the older players who had carried Antiguian cricket before him.

By the time he was selected for the West Indies Under-19 set-up in 2022, Sampson had already carved out a reputation as one of Antigua’s most promising youngsters. For him, the Under-19 call-up wasn’t just recognition; it was validation of the hours he had spent in nets, balancing school with long training sessions, working on fitness routines that would allow him to survive the intensity of elite cricket. His debut at the youth international level came in the 2022 ICC Under-19 World Cup, hosted in the Caribbean. Playing in front of home crowds, wearing maroon colours, he experienced the intoxicating mix of pressure and pride.

Although his returns in the tournament were modest, scoring 71 runs across four matches at an average of just under 20, with a best of 32 against Sri Lanka, the significance lay in the exposure. He faced bowlers from Asia and Africa with entirely different skill sets, learning the importance of adapting quickly. More than the runs, it was his calmness at the crease that impressed. In the game against Sri Lanka, West Indies were wobbling early, but Sampson settled nerves with compact defence and smart singles, holding one end long enough for the innings to recover.

Back home, Sampson returned to the Antigua domestic circuit, representing Pigotts Crushers in the Antigua and Barbuda Cricket Association competitions. It was here that his game began to sharpen. Batting in middle-order positions, he scored consistently, with multiple half-centuries across the 2022–23 season. His highest, a crisp 76 against Jennings Tigers, was an innings marked by maturity: rotating strike early, launching into spinners later, and finishing with a flourish of boundaries. His domestic form made him a candidate for the Leeward Islands franchise in regional tournaments.

By 2023, Quentin Sampson made his List A debut for Leeward Islands Hurricanes in the Super50 Cup. It was a moment of both pride and challenge. Batting at number six, he made 29 off 42 balls against Jamaica Scorpions, showing glimpses of promise. Across the tournament, he collected 143 runs in six matches at an average of 28.60, with a highest score of 58 against Guyana Harpy Eagles. That fifty was important; he came in at 90 for 4 on a tricky surface, held the innings together, and carried Leewards to a competitive total. For a teenager in his first regional tournament, it was a marker of resilience.

In first-class cricket, Sampson debuted in the 2024 West Indies Championship, representing the Leeward Islands. Facing Barbados Pride in his first match, he scored a fighting 37 in the second innings, batting nearly two hours to try and stave off defeat. Across his first season, he compiled 212 runs in five matches at an average of 23.55, with a top score of 64 against Trinidad and Tobago Red Force. While those numbers didn’t yet signal dominance, they confirmed that he belonged at this level, that his technique and temperament could stand up against experienced regional bowlers.

Coaches often point to his work ethic. During training camps, he is usually the first to arrive and the last to leave. His batting sessions are long, filled with throwdowns where he practices leaving outside off stump, perfecting his footwork against spin, and working on boundary options without recklessness. One Leewards coach remarked, “Quentin reminds me of a young Shiv [Chanderpaul] in his dedication. He doesn’t have Shiv’s unorthodox stance, but he has the same hunger to bat long.”

The road ahead will not be easy. Regional cricket in the West Indies is fiercely competitive, with many young players fighting for limited spots. Sampson will need to turn his starts into hundreds, his fifties into match-winning knocks. He will also need to adapt his game for T20 cricket if he is to secure a permanent place in franchise leagues, which are increasingly serving as pathways to international exposure. But if his journey so far is any indication, he has the patience to grow step by step.

Cricket, especially in the Caribbean, is as much about resilience as it is about talent. Quentin Sampson’s career so far reflects both. Born in 2005, molded in Antigua’s cricketing culture, tested in Under-19 internationals, and now building his presence in regional competitions, he carries within him the blend of discipline and ambition that could shape the West Indies’ future. And as he walks to the crease in Guyana or Barbados, pads strapped tight, eyes steady, one gets the sense that his story is only beginning, a story of patience, promise, and the pursuit of something lasting in a game that so often rewards the fleeting.

(As of September 2025)