The duo aiming to be Glamorgan's first England cricketers in 20 years

2 hours ago 4

Asa Tribe and Ben Kellaway photocall for GlamorganImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Asa Tribe (left) and Ben Kellaway have had breakthrough seasons for Glamorgan

BySaihaj Jaspal

BBC Sport Wales

Not since the summer of 2005 have Glamorgan had one of their own represent England.

When Simon Jones tore through Australia's middle-order during the third Ashes Test, those captivated by the summer's cricket would have quickly dismissed the idea of it being one of his final outings in England whites.

The Swansea-born fast-bowler was an integral part of England's Ashes victory, taking 18 wickets at an average of 21, but it wasn't to last.

During the fourth Test of the series, Jones suffered an ankle injury that ruled him out of the rest of the series. A succession of injuries followed, preventing a flickering international career from truly taking off.

Simon Jones celebrates against Australia in the 2005 AshesImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Jones was an integral part of England's first Ashes victory since 1986/87

Twenty years later and no Glamorgan player has played on the biggest stage. The past year has, however, brought hope with a group of players who have propelled the county to the First Division.

Within this squad are two cricketers from very different backgrounds who have emerged as serious candidates to end Glamorgan's long wait for an England star or two.

Asa Tribe and Ben Kellaway share as many similarities as they do differences. They are both 21-year-olds who have just finished a year of balancing professional cricket with graduating from universities in Cardiff.

One is born and raised in Wales, developing through Glamorgan's pathway system whilst the other spent the first 18 years of his life on the island of Jersey.

Both have had breakthrough years, producing match-winning performances across all formats and going from student loans to lucrative franchise deals.

Now they are being earmarked for England Lions call-ups to Australia, shadowing the main squad for this winter's Ashes.

Tribe's time?

After starting the season outside Glamorgan's first team, Tribe seized an opportunity to open the batting and has not looked back, scoring 731 County Championship runs at an average of 45.68.

"I thought there would be some growth after a hard winter, but I didn't think the numbers would be as good as they've been," Tribe told BBC Sport Wales.

In the One-Day Cup it was 401 runs at an average of 80.20, not bad for someone who hadn't played cricket outside of Jersey until the age of 18.

The 21-year-old speaks fondly about his early years growing up in Jersey but says he "was ready to flee the nest". Tribe credits the move to Cardiff for allowing him to turn childhood dreams into reality.

"I always felt that if I was going to take my cricket forward, I couldn't do that on the Island.

"I come from an environment where (making it as a professional cricketer), it wasn't even talked about and if you did mention it the attitude would be 'you're from Jersey those things don't happen over here'.'Coming over here made me believe," says the batter.

Asa Tribe battingImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Tribe scored 731 County Championship runs at an average of 45.68 opening the batting

From Cardiff to South Africa via Texas, Adelaide and Nepal

As a result of his impressive form across all formats, Tribe has earnt himself multiple franchise deals this winter.

His calendar reads like a series of Race Across the World. He's signed deals to play in the National Cricket League in Texas, a stint in Adelaide playing Grade cricket, then onto a Nepalese T20 competition, before signing a "surreal" deal with the Paarl Royals in the SA20.

He found out about his draft selection whilst on the field during a County Championship match against Northants and thought his team-mates were joking around when they told him that he'd be going to South Africa to play in one of the richest franchise leagues in the world.

It was in the same game Tribe scored a career-best 206, the biggest score in a freak run of form that included four centuries in six games for Glamorgan and Jersey.

What started as murmurs of an England Lions call-up have now grown into serious conversations and it's something he aspires to achieve.

"The next stage up from performing well in red-ball county cricket is to go and play Lions and it would be a tough challenge, but one that I feel I'm ready for, it's an aspiration of mine to play for England," says Tribe.

Kellaway's on the way?

Simon Jones' performances in the summer of 05' brought pride to a nation, one that Ben Kellaway is "proud" to be from.

The all-rounder hopes to become the first Welshman since Jones to play Test cricket for England and his performances this season are doing him no harm.

The 21-year-old has scored 813 County Championship runs at an average of 54.20 whilst taking 25 wickets at 32.12.

Kellaway describes his first full season playing first team cricket as a "rollercoaster" and says he "wouldn't have believed" the success he's had if it was shown to him at the beginning of the year.

Glamorgan have relied on his runs, wickets, and ambidextrous bowling to balance the squad.

He went viral last year, after taking wickets with each arm in the same over, but his ability to bowl right-arm and left-arm off spin is no gimmick, instead, a carefully thought-out strategy to set him apart from the rest.

"How can I make myself stand-out within the game? An off-spinner batter is one of the most common skills out there.

"So it was a conversation around how I can become more unique and it's come on a long way since I first let it out last year, but it's still got a hell of a long way to go," he says.

Ben Kellaway celebrating a wicket.Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Ben Kellaway has scored 813 County Championship runs at an average of 54.20 whilst taking 25 wickets at 32.12

Something that all teams look for is X-factor and it's a term often used to describe Kellaway's batting, bowling, and fielding.

It's also the reason his roller-coaster ride took another loop midway through the summer when he was selected as a wildcard pick for Welsh Fire in the Hundred.

Kellaway has earned the rewards for his match-winning contributions across T20s and four-day cricket which included becoming the youngest Glamorgan player to score a century and take a five-wicket haul in the same match against Gloucestershire.

Despite "coming from a family with no cricketing background" Kellaway sees no ceiling for himself.

During the summer, he was invited to an ECB spin bowling camp in Loughborough, a clear sign of his blossoming reputation and increasing potential to qualify for further honours.

Ben Kellaway winning Player of the Match in a Hundred gameImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

The 21-year-old Ben Kellaway was Player of the Match in his Hundred debut after he took two wickets and three catches against the Birmingham Phoenix

"It'd be an absolutely unbelievable opportunity (England Lions tour) if it came around. That's definitely a main goal of mine, to go up a level and experience that stuff and show people what I can do," he said.

The Chepstow native's identity plays a massive part in his motivation to succeed, and he is aware of Wales's poor record of producing England cricketers, something he wants to change.

"It's always been a goal for a youngster like me to represent England, if I can be a Welshman representing England and add my name to a list of not many, that will be a very proud thing," he says.

New hopes

Tribe and Kellaway share a desire for more. There has arguably never been a better England set-up to be fast tracked into.

With the current squad rotating through off-spinning all-rounders and a crucial Ashes series ahead for the batters, what seemed a once distant dream for an island boy and a Welshman with no cricketing background has every chance of becoming a reality.

A good place to start would be selection for this winter's Lion's tour, but regardless of the outcome, they are providing hope for a nation and county that has been starved of it for so long.

A success itself.

Soak it up

Glamorgan coach Richard Dawson says it would mean a lot to the club if either or both become the first England Lions player from Glamorgan since James Harris, early in his career.

"They've worked hard, the club wants to have people recognised for good performances so it's good to have two lads at 21 years old who've performed this year and contributed to winning games as they've finished university," he said.

"They've influenced wins and that's the biggest thing for players."

As a former England player himself, Dawson's advice was simply: "Soak it up, learn off all the players there, take in all the information and enjoy the experience, if they get the call that would be fantastic."

Read Entire Article
Ekonomi | Asset | Lokal | Tech|