Colonial era , a Barbadian, was regarded as the "first of the great West Indian batsmen". Cricket in Barbados dates from at least the late 18th century, with the
Barbados cricket buckle depicting a slave playing cricket around 1780. In February 1865, Barbados took part in what was later designated the inaugural
first-class match in the West Indies, hosting Demerara (now
Guyana) at the
Garrison Savannah in
Bridgetown. Barbados won the match by 138 runs, but lost the return fixture, played in
Georgetown later in the year, by two wickets. In September 1891, the
Inter-Colonial Tournament was inaugurated, which saw Barbados, British Guiana, and
Trinidad engaged in regular competition for the first time. The tournament was played every two seasons until the 1907–08 season, and annually until the 1938–39 season (with a gap during World War I). In January 1888, Barbados played their first match against a team that was not another British colony in the West Indies, appearing in a fixture against an
amateur team representing the United States. That match was not classed as first-class, but the 1890s saw several tours from English sides that were granted first-class status. A representative West Indies team was organised for the first time in 1897, to play
a touring English team led by
Arthur Priestley. The inaugural team included three Barbadians –
Harold Austin,
Donald McAuley, and
Clifford Goodman. Austin, a future speaker of the
Barbados House of Assembly, later became the first Barbadian to captain the West Indies, doing so in January 1902 against
another English team, led by
Richard Bennet. The West Indies played their first
Test matches on
a 1928 tour of England, with five members of the 17-man touring party being Barbadians. The most experienced Barbadian on tour was the 40-year-old
George Challenor, who has been called the "first of the great West Indian batsmen". The first Barbadian to captain the West Indies in a Test match was
Teddy Hoad, who did so when England toured
during the 1929–30 season. That match was played at Bridgetown's
Kensington Oval, and was the first Test to be held in the West Indies. When the West Indies toured Australia for the first time
during the 1930–31 season, another Barbadian,
Herman Griffith, became the first bowler to dismiss
Don Bradman for a Test match
duck. In February 1946, two Barbadian batsmen,
Clyde Walcott and
Frank Worrell, set a new record for the highest
partnership in first-class cricket, putting on 574 not out against Trinidad. Walcott, Worrell, and another Barbadian,
Everton Weekes, all made their Test debuts during
England's 1947–48 tour of the West Indies. The trio eventually became known as the "three Ws", and as "one of the greatest middle-order line-ups the game has ever seen", were key members of the West Indies from the late 1940s through to the late 1950s. All three eventually received knighthoods, and were inaugural inductees into the
ICC Hall of Fame in 2009. Worrell was especially esteemed as the first black man to captain the West Indies, doing so on the team's
1960–61 tour of Australia. He was succeeded as captain by another Barbadian,
Garfield Sobers, whose 365 not out against
Pakistan in 1958 set a record for the highest Test score that was not passed for another 36 years. ,
Bridgetown, features a statue of Sir
Garfield Sobers, who has scored more Test runs than any other Barbadian.
Post-independence Barbados gained full independence on 30 November 1966, having earlier been a part of the short-lived
West Indies Federation (between 1958 and 1962).
The inaugural season of the
Shell Shield had been played earlier in the year (and won by Barbados), marking the return of a formal first-class structure for the first time since 1939, when the last Inter-Colonial Tournament was played. In 1973, Barbados also won
the inaugural edition of what is now the
Regional Super50, the West Indian
limited-overs competition. Barbados were the dominant team throughout the early years of the Shell Shield, winning 12 out of the first 20 editions (including five consecutively from the 1975–76 season to the 1979–80 season). The West Indian teams that won the
1975 and
1979 World Cups included three and four Barbadians, respectively.
Joel Garner, who took a five-wicket haul against
England in
the 1979 final, was a Barbadian, as was
Malcolm Marshall, who was in the squad but did not play any matches. Marshall, who had only made his Test debut the previous year, was one of the world's leading fast bowlers during the 1980s, and established a new record for the most Test wickets taken by a West Indian (since beaten by
Courtney Walsh). The West Indian opening batsmen throughout the 1980s were
Gordon Greenidge and
Desmond Haynes, both Barbadians. Greenidge and Haynes opened the batting together in 148 innings between 1978 and 1991, and put on 6,482 runs together, both records for opening batsmen that have yet to be beaten. At the
1998 Commonwealth Games in
Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, Barbados and the other West Indian teams participated individually in
the cricket tournament, held for the first and only time. Barbados easily defeated
Northern Ireland and
Bangladesh, but lost to
South Africa in their final group-stage match to miss out on qualification for the semi-finals. The team's participation in the Commonwealth Games coincided with a period of superiority at domestic first-class level – from the 1994–95 season through to the 2003–04 season, the team won six out of ten titles.
Jason Holder, who was appointed Test captain in 2015, is the most recent Barbadian to serve as captain of the West Indies. ==Current squad==