Sherwin Legay Campbell (born 1 November 1970) is a former Barbadian cricketer who played 52 Tests and 90 One Day Internationals for the West Indies, and also a former ODI captain for Windies.
Campbell eventually earned the attention of the West Indies' selectors during the 1993-94 Red Stripe Cup, amassing 400 runs in five games with three hundreds.
[2][3][4] Campbell began his Test career with innings of 51 and 88 on the 1995 tour of New Zealand though he struggled against Australia the following home season and was dropped in favor of Stuart Williams.
His second Test century, a gritty fourth innings 113, came against an Australian attack including Glen McGrath and Shane Warne in Brisbane that year.
Campbell batted nearly seven hours to bring West Indies within sight of a draw before falling in the third session of the final day.
He was the team's leading run-scorer (248) during the ill-fated Pakistan tour of 1997, standing up to the new ball pair of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis as his teammates struggled to a 3–0 defeat.
With 2856 runs, he finished his career as West Indies' fifth most successful opening batsman behind Gordon Greenidge (7488), Desmond Haynes (7422) Roy Fredericks (4329) and Conrad Hunte (3245).