“I remember having two references on my desk – one from Sir Garry Sobers and the other, I can’t recall whether it was [Desmond] Haynes or [Gordon] Greenidge, but it was definitely one of them,” laughs Michael Powell.
The former Warwickshire batter was director of cricket at Rugby School when Jacob Bethell’s application arrived on his desk. Unsurprisingly, given the names involved, it didn’t take him long to realise he had someone extraordinary coming his way from Barbados. And then he saw him play.
“I’ve known him since he was an 11-year-old, and I might be slightly old school but having watched him for all that time, I’ve always seen him as a Test player,” says Powell, no doubt pleased that England’s hierarchy appear to agree with that assessment, given Bethell’s Test call-up for the tour of New Zealand last week.
“He has fantastic hands. He has got a rhythmical swing of the bat, and that’s born out of him hitting balls in his backyard on the end of a rope swing for hours and hours. It’s ingrained in him. The moment I saw him I just thought, ‘you’ve been born with a bat in your hand, it’s in your blood’. He has grown up with that great West Indian heritage, and wanting to emulate [Brian] Lara and co.”
Bethell, who grew up in Barbados before gaining a cricket scholarship at the age of 12, is very much at the vanguard of the next generation of players in this new England era.
Given his versatility with the ball, alongside his skill with bat in hand, he could be a fixture across all formats for the next decade and beyond.
This story is from the November 06, 2024 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 06, 2024 edition of The Independent.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
'Explaining a film takes the fun away for the audience'
Acclaimed director Andrea Arnold speaks to Louis Chilton about working with Barry Keoghan, plucking great actors off the street, and why working in US TV felt like a holiday’
Why you can't buy tickets on the UK's newest airline
Simon Calder hears about the benefits of wet lease’ capacity and white-tail’ aircraft from the boss of Ascend Airways
Fly me to the moon? Not tonight, thanks, I'm busy
Singer Olivia Rodrigo says men who want to go to space are weird’. It makes sense, writes Helen Coffey, who has her own list of signals that a first date is also likely to be the last
Penned in: family farms are facing an existential threat
Coming from a generation of farmers, Richard Benson has seen the battles those in agriculture face as he fears the tractor tax’ will irrevocably damage the British countryside
Barbados kid leading next generation in all formats
Jacob Bethell is starring for England in the West Indies with his flamboyant style and has a big future in the Test game
United have found a classy manager, in any language
Sporting CP’s Champions League match with Manchester City last night was full of intriguing sub-plots, as manager Ruben Amorim prepares to join Manchester United later this month and his sporting director and close friend, Hugo Viana, prepares to join City in the new year.
City thumped by Sporting in Amorim's home farewell
Ruben Amorim endeared himself to Manchester United fans before even arriving at Old Trafford by engineering a stunning 4-1 defeat of Manchester City with Sporting Lisbon.
Devastating second-half display sees Reds run riot
A vision of an alternative future turns into a brush with history.
North Korean troops will be cannon fodder' in Ukraine
The North Korean troops being used to bolster Russian forces in Ukraine face becoming cannon fodder” and their presence in the region will not alter the path of the war, said military experts.
McGregor 'took cocaine and raped woman' in hotel
Conor McGregor allegedly pinned down and raped a woman ina Dublin hotel while high on cocaine, the city’s High Court has been told.