My aim has always been to be at the top.

I do enjoy batting - if the bowling's not quick!

Test cricket should be No. 1 for every cricketer.

I don't bowl to hit people; I bowl to get wickets.

I love to play Test cricket; it's the main cricket.

I felt I bowled well for Barbados, and that helped me.

Being selected for West Indies actually changed my life.

A team needs experienced cricketers to guide its younger players.

It is good to make my comeback in Jamaica after not playing for so long.

My first love is football. When I get the chance, I play football for fitness.

One of my aims is to be the fastest and regarded as the best fast bowler in the world.

I don't have any complaints. I cannot say I miss playing for the West Indies that much.

I played cricket at primary school but hardly at all at high school. I was more of a footballer.

I am training a lot harder, gym a lot, more muscle, strengthening my back, my legs, my muscles, my weak areas a lot.

I did a lot of good work with my trainer and the physio in Barbados, and they were tremendous help to me during my comeback period.

In Twenty20s, you have to bowl a lot fuller, especially at the death, and you've got to be mindful of what you're doing. But it's still cricket.

Taking part and helping West Indies win the World T20 in 2012 - I'll never forget the feeling. The celebrations afterwards were crazy, a massive all-nighter.

I found it quite funny when my teacher at secondary school saw me bowl and wanted me to throw the javelin. So I tried, and I kept hitting the back of my head!

You have to be smart on your feet. It will be hard on wickets where the ball will keep low. Hopefully, you can get one to fly, and that puts doubts in the batsman's mind.

For me, David Warner isn't just the future of Australian batting, he's the future for cricket in general because he can excel in any form of the game. I'm excited just watching him.

I have some goals I'm looking to achieve, and one thing is to help the team win and move back up the ladder. This is vitally important to the team overall and to the supporters of West Indies cricket.

I'm delighted to have signed for such an ambitious club as Hampshire. I'm very much looking forward to my first taste of county cricket. It's also an honour to follow other Bajans like Malcolm Marshall and Gordon Greenidge to Hampshire.

I was away from the game for a few years, and it feels good to be back. I'm bowling quite well and also getting the ball to reverse swing. During the time off, I worked a lot on getting the ball to reverse swing; now it's working well for me.

It is going to be difficult for the West Indies to get back to the top, but we got to start somewhere, and if playing young players is the way we have decided to go, these young players must be given the chance to mature and develop and not be discarded at an early age.

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