Richard Edwards finds a former England keeper in awe of the current man behind the stumps, and not just for his glovework
It took Jack Russell eight long years of work behind the stumps for his county before he was deemed sufficiently experienced to play for his country. Jonny Bairstow, in contrast, has had to do his growing up in a very different environment.
The Yorkshireman was first brought in as a wicketkeeper during the ill fated Ashes tour of 2013/14, taking up the gauntlets as England looked to strengthen a batting line-up that had long since been exposed as wafer-thin by a marauding Mitchell Johnson.
It wasn’t a roaring success but the blame could hardly be laid at Bairstow’s door, with England in complete disarray by the time he entered the fray.
An injury to Jos Buttler during England’s 2016 series against Pakistan then handed him an additional opportunity behind the stumps, after calls for him to hand back the gloves following a mixed showing against Sri Lanka earlier that year.
He hasn’t looked back since, grasping his chance with both hands and firmly establishing himself as one of England’s most reliable and consistent performers with both bat and gloves.
It has been a remarkable transformation given the doubts that England harboured over his ability to do both jobs as recently as last summer. That series against Sri Lanka highlighted the kind of flaws that were to be expected of a keeper who had spent so little time behind the stumps in competitive cricket.
Bu hikaye The Cricket Paper dergisinin November 17, 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Cricket Paper dergisinin November 17, 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Kohli leads RCB to much-needed win
VIRAT KOHLI returned to top form with 72 not out to lead RCB to an eight-wicket victory over the Royals in Abu Dhabi.
TEWATIA HAS SPARKED MY LOVE AFFAIR WITH THE IPL
James Wallace admits he has been surprisingly taken in by the IPL so far – and, in particular, the performance of a new Royal renegade
Whitewash victory is just the T20 tonic for Keightley
A SERIES that few thought would come to fruition ended in triumph for England who completed a 5-0 whitewash of the West Indies in Derby.
TEN OUT OF TEN! RYAN IS BASKING IN MORE GLORY
Chris Stocks catches up with Ryan ten Doeschate, who has plotted Essex’s recent county domination every step of the way
Surrey have the Will to end hoodoo
WILL Jacks may be a hot batting prospect but he’s relished the added responsibility with the ball in Surrey’s charge to T20 Finals Day.
NOW IT'S OUR TIME TO HELP OTHERS
Chris Stocks catches up with England’s director of cricket and discusses the need for the ECB to help boards around the world
IT'S OFTEN DOWN TO A THROW OF THE DICE
Garfield Robinson explains just how big a part luck plays in determining success or failure in sport
FINDING TALENTS LIKE TOM IS A GAIN IN ITSELF
One of the unexpected highlights to emerge from English cricket’s Covid-attenuated season was the chance given to young players to strut their stuff. With many overseas players and Kolpaks affected by travel restrictions many counties looked instead to the young talent on their staffs with gratifying results.
Future looks bright for the Ohio Slinger
ALI Khan is earning his stars and stripes in the Indian Premier League, with the first American to play in the tournament breaking down barriers in every sense.
Spin trio put squeeze on after Glenn shows off skill with the bat
SARAH GLENN helped England spin it to win it after proving she can make an all-round contribution.