Loading...
Loading...

Protein is now at Starbucks, and it's never tasted so good.
You can add protein, cold foam to your favorite drink or try one of our new protein lattes or matcha.
Try it today at Starbucks.
5 a.m. I'm up with a crisp, Celsius energy drink, running 12 miles today.
Grab a green juice, quick change, and head to work.
Meetings, workshops, one more Celsius, no slowing down.
Working late, but obviously still meeting the girls for a little dancing.
Celsius, live, fit, go.
Grab a cold, refreshing Celsius at your local retailer or locate now at Celsius.com.
They say you should learn something new every day.
Like how you should only drink Yeager Meister at zero degrees Fahrenheit.
Ice cold, like those frozen cavemen they find, which makes you wonder,
what would a caveman think of Yeager Meister?
Well, if you served it warm, he'd probably throw it in your face, say,
and storm off, and nobody wants that.
So drink it cold or not at all?
Yeager Meister, damn, that's cold.
Drink responsibly Yeager Meister, La Cure, 35% alcohol by volume imported by Master Yeager Meister,
U.S. White Plains, New York.
This is the overthrown power by Spongebob, brought to you by the Premier League Cricket Club.
Welcome everybody to the overthrow.
Powered by Spongebob once again at the Premier League Cricket Club.
And joining me as always, my colleague, Mr. Hugh Newsom, how you doing, buddy?
Not always, as always.
Well, yeah, you did start on one last different matter, isn't it?
Yeah, most of the time.
Most of the time.
Oh, good.
Got some nice new gear from Cooker at me.
We have.
We actually look semi-professional now, which is slightly worrying.
So anybody wants their team wear from Cookery?
Probably talked to us, and we'll just pass you on to someone anyway, because obviously...
I've got a Cookaboo right here, but I haven't got a hat.
You can't mention Cookaboo, you know?
You can't do that.
Not the slightest.
Well, anyway.
Anyway, I saw my hat out of them, isn't it?
Yeah.
More importantly, we've got a cracking guest today, you know, overthrow, building up to the season.
And we're talking to a gentleman who...
I really respect this.
He played for one club.
Yeah.
And, you know, that one club thing, in most sports these days, is almost unheard of, to be frank.
And since the age of, I think, about 12 in 2009, he was at Gloucestershire.
But he's retired now, Ish, because he's going to become a non-playing pro.
But I'm sorry, a non-pro, playing at Callington in the Cornwall.
You've got Mr. Chris Dent, how you doing, mate?
Oh, good.
Thank you.
Thank you for having me on.
Absolutely.
Got to ask, yeah, in terms of privilege of playing professional cricket for that long, how proud are you that you did just play for one county,
stuck after all those years from that debut in 2009, I think it was incredible career to have.
Yeah, definitely, I'm, I definitely am.
Obviously, I'm from Bristol as well, so to have played, you know, on my local club for as long as I did.
Yeah, I'm really proud.
I think it was sinking more as, you know, as I finished.
But I think, yeah, the, it's obviously rare, rare, rare nowadays.
I feel like when I first started, it was a bit more common, but yeah, it's, it's a lot rare of these days.
But yeah, no, it's, I had a great journey with Gloucestershire.
And, you know, it wouldn't, probably wouldn't have been the same if I had gone off somewhere else.
So it was nice to, to start and finish there.
11,000 first-class lawns on average of 36, six, higher than Zach Clawley Ovenspringland, not bitter at all.
2,167.50s.
And also the proud owner of the ESPN Cricking Info picture that looks the least like you.
I can't imagine that the picture on Cricking Info, I assume you're about 18 there.
You know, it's, you know, I literally, have you got that in your passport?
You flop that picture out in the passport when you're going through the airport.
Yeah, so this isn't your passport.
My passport photos even worse.
It's crazy.
So I did, obviously, I had a testimonial 2024 and I did, like, got all the pictures on my headshots from over the years.
And I reckon my headshots change more than anyone else's.
Like, most people are pretty similar the whole way through, whereas I've gone like long hair beard, no beard, blonde hair, like everything.
So, yeah, I've had fair few looks at the time.
Yeah, definitely look very different to those early photos.
It makes me laugh. It's not like Cricking Info, I haven't got a choice of photos to use.
I mean, it's not like they put their hand up and took one and said, that's the one you stuck with for the rest of your life, is it?
It's a bit lazy, I can't be bothered to change it.
I've got absolutely.
We can't afford to be lazy at the Premier League Cricking Club because we don't get paid.
So we have to just do everything ourselves anyway.
But in terms of that career, Chris, you know, that 11,000 plus runs first class, 15,000 plus runs overall.
Can I ask you a really simple question?
Which of those formats did you enjoy the most over the years?
The 4-day stuff was always the thing that I really, that pride of myself on.
I think especially at the start of my career, 4-day was the thing.
Like, everyone talked about trying to get over 1,000 runs, trying to get over 60 with kids.
There wasn't like loads of chat about what you didn't see 20, what you didn't 50 over.
It was all about what you did in the 4-day stuff.
Changed a bit now, but I think that was something I always pride of myself on.
It's how many runs I could get in the 4-day stuff.
And there's nothing better than winning a 4-day match.
You battle for 4 days with your mates.
Sometimes you're away in hotels and you get a win at the end of those 4 days.
There's nothing better than that.
Whereas with 2020, you turn up 3 hours later, you'd be the one who lost.
It never felt quite the same as battling for 4 days.
Yeah, I think one of the things I find really interesting about Dan Huehl back then on this
is every single conversation we've had over the last couple of years with an endable CA player.
They always say that 3-day Red Bulls, the one they enjoy the most for exactly that same reason.
And I think that's reflective as we talk about T20.
We were talking about the 100 in the money that's going around there.
But that Red Bull is still full stop at the story of the pinnacle.
Yeah, definitely.
I think it should be.
You know, I think it's going to be getting challenged over the years being challenged,
but we'll get challenged even more with the money this obviously in the 2020 stuff,
the franchise stuff.
Like, suddenly, when you can earn such big cash elsewhere,
is slogging it for 4 days in Darby or Leicester or whatever,
is it as appealing, probably not, but hopefully, you know,
people will still want to do the hard jobs.
Yeah, people always pick on Darby at that moment, you know.
Yeah, do you want to tell us where we're both based?
It's fair enough though.
It is fair enough.
But I think the race course, I mean, I don't know whether,
when you played there, first Chris apparently, I'm,
I'm not fun and moved to Darbyshire in 2013,
but at the back, the race course used to be completely open.
I don't know if you played it,
it was like that.
And that would have been a renders because it was like,
it's like fetching it from the river.
Yeah, yeah.
No, it wasn't completely open then, but we obviously changed in those like,
change rooms that were pitch level.
Yeah.
To be honest, I haven't explored Darby, if I'm honest,
all I ever did was stay in a hotel, not too far away,
drive to the ground.
All you see is all the like more industrial stuff.
I know that like outskirts where the players live,
obviously I played with that chapel.
So I think he lives in a nice house somewhere around there.
So yeah, I've only really seen the ground and just around the ground,
which is not the most appealing place.
Which is the life of a county cricketer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Do you still get out?
The only time you might maybe spend some time around a city
as if you've been one in two or three days
and you've got that little bit of extra time,
but no doubt you'd actually want to get back home then as well.
Yeah, pretty much that works.
Just talking on the four day stuff.
The one thing I think everyone always talks about,
it annoys me through the summer,
they always talk about the death of test cricket
like every of the death test cricket the death of four day.
But all the noise I'm hearing out of, you know,
these IPL comps and the T20 World Cup is like
the grounding of four day cricket,
all the best players are grounded in four day cricket.
You've got Sue Ivansche age eight hitting hundreds for fun
and his dad's like, it's test cricket.
And then, you know, I will speed was, you know,
the guy that sort of tried to go that red ball,
you know, T20 only route and then has come back to four day.
Joss Butler's having an absolute nightmare.
You know, you were going to go on Joss,
going over a hit in the counter championship
because it seems that actually the four day
creates this foundation for everything else.
Is that what you're doing with that?
Yeah, I think so.
I think obviously four day,
your face a bit more in your hands.
When it comes to T20 in the short of form,
like you got there,
you've got to do a job for the team by scoring fast.
You're sort of sacrificing
your wiki a little bit,
whereas when it comes to the four day,
you can like really show,
show like your longevity in your class
by just bang as long as you want.
And that's what I liked about four days that
I felt like I could be more consistent.
I could get in there and about as long as I wanted
whereas in T20 it was a bit, you know,
I was a guy out there trying to whack it before I knew
I'm out, my day's done and I was a bit like,
this is just,
it just didn't feel right to me.
As much as I enjoy trying to whack it,
it's just, yeah,
it just felt like I was,
you just throw your wicket away and there's no,
it's not as much pride in your,
your performance in those sort of formats.
Yeah, just think of it.
You're stuck like dust,
but I think you're right,
like getting out and getting back to,
to just batting,
you know, batting long periods of time.
I ain't got the perfect example.
Perfect example.
One of your colleagues,
not last season, the season before,
Mr James Bracey,
went to play for Bristol for a couple of weeks,
scored back to back hundreds,
came back into the county championship,
scored back to back hundreds.
He got out in the middle
and just played the ball, didn't he?
Yeah, yeah.
No, he's, he's a great example.
He,
like at the minute he doesn't play huge amount of T20,
but he's just a lover of batting,
just loves getting out there.
And I think gloss is quite lucky
because they've got a few youngsters
that are like that.
It's even like Ben Charlesworth,
who's a great T20 player.
He just loved batting.
So loves Red Bull,
loves batting,
Ollie Price is the same.
Like they bat forever if they could.
So gloss is lucky in that sense,
but I think, yeah,
I think that's good for your,
your career and your progress is just,
you know,
just batting lots and lots and lots and in T20,
you don't,
you don't like best case scenario,
you bat 60 balls.
And if you bat 60 balls,
you probably need to have got 140,
otherwise you've,
you've not done a good job.
So it's tricky and I just think,
yeah, you can easily get out of Nick
and struggle to get back in it
because you've got,
yeah, I haven't got any time to,
to like give yourself that,
that bit of,
you know,
that, that,
that sort of platform,
like that's the going out there,
and that's to keep trying to whack it.
You can't go,
I'm going to give myself 20 balls there.
You're not allowed to do that.
So yeah,
no way in playing some longer form
might just be what he needs.
Have you found it's changed to T20 stuff
in, you know,
in your career,
you know, coming in in 2010,
when you started,
compared to how it was,
when you finished, you know,
was there a,
a definite shift,
almost like those two games?
Yeah, I think so.
I think when I started,
it was just like,
I remember playing quite early on in my career.
I didn't play loads of T20 playing,
and I just remember just feeling like,
it was just,
it's just a bit of fun.
You just,
didn't really matter.
If you got out,
like, just had a bit of fun,
and then you got back to the,
the like,
the main business,
which was,
you thought A games,
whereas now,
I think,
because there's so much money in it,
it's a lot more serious now,
you know,
clubs want to win the T20,
because there's money in it.
Players want to do well in the T20,
because then they can get franchise gigs.
You know, like,
it's become way more serious
because of the financial rewards you get for it.
Whereas,
they weren't there back then.
Like, there was pretty much only the really early IPL,
which,
international,
the big stars are playing.
Otherwise,
you,
you made your money by being as good
as you could at Forty Cricket
and getting a big county contract.
Whereas,
there's obviously a huge shift in that now.
So,
just taking you back then.
So,
where,
where's its start?
Chris, for you, you know,
and you're,
you're a part of Cricketer's school,
Cricketer,
where was the,
where was Cricket first happening for you?
Um,
my dad,
my dad was into Cricket.
So, I think,
at home is where it first started.
I didn't go to private school.
I went to
back cross school in North Somerset.
So, that's just a,
it wasn't really
huge Cricket in school,
more football rugby.
So, I think,
you know,
regarding,
there's pretty much
where my Cricket started.
And I ended up playing
at a small club called
Cleve Creek Club.
Um,
I played there
from 9 to 13,
14,
and then I moved to
Thornbury because my school
teacher was from Thornbury.
Um,
so he got me
to go there
and Thornbury
were a good side then.
Obviously,
there's still a good side,
but, um,
yeah,
so then I,
you know,
learnt my Cricket there
and ended up
on Gloucester Academy
and then I went to
the College Groups.
It wasn't really,
like obviously,
a lot of route now
is through private schools.
Um,
that wasn't my route.
It was sort of,
this did well.
Gloucester Age Groups
worked my way up.
And then,
yeah,
it's fine.
I was,
I was in the Academy
and into the second team.
And, yeah.
I think there's a real
interest in,
sort of,
changing that period.
I mean,
we're really talking,
sort of early 2000 to 2009.
It's not that long ago.
And that's now shifted,
independent public schools and you know I picked up on TV the other day I've had the
fact that you know Joe Roots, Harry Brooke they were picked up at sixth form level to go
to an independent school they were at state school beforehand. Do you think we're missing
that age old trick massively there with the amount of players who are not coming through
state school and actually still ended up playing at clubs like Thornbury because we're a big
believer it all starts in the clubs these days it used to start at school but it starts at those
clubs this late. Yeah I think so I think there's almost like two ways you sort of get into
cricket see they're like you go to a private school and cricket's big or your family parents
whatever into cricket so you you get in earlier I think if you're not in either of those two
you just you end up picking up about almost too late yeah and I think for example like Joe
hybrid like up in up north I think cricket's play like Percy I've been up there a lot but
like cricket has played more in families whereas down south it feels more football more rugby
so like they would have yeah just been probably picked up about early at home like that and then
yeah in their state school they're ahead of everyone else and suddenly off you go but I think
yeah there's two ways in you the your parents are into it so you get exposure early or them
or you go to private school because if you're exposed to cricket at 15 you catch it up you know
yeah it's a big trick yeah it's a big catch up yeah it's I think the family thing is
is absolutely right I don't also the school thing I mean one of the things about the private
school thing is it cricket's a stupid game you know you stand out there and if you're
bad at it which you are when you start you're out there for hours doing something you're bad at
and in order to become good at it you've got to keep doing it and at school they make you do it
so like you say you start when you're very young and you just get good at it without realizing
or if you're starting it's a really difficult game to just start we've got a young lad in our
he's heading to our first team he started when he was 11 and he's into our first team he's 15
you know which has been absolutely incredible because I just haven't seen anybody else do that
like he has to go from an pure football to cricket and that was lovely to see because everybody
else is you know literally you know had about in a little quick cricket back in their hands and so
with two but um so you've gone through the summer set pathway sorry some sets stop the reset
gone through the Gloucestershire pathways um but um there's a trick I think to the Wolletton
dragons uh in Perth is that correct yeah yeah where you where you played with a certain cam
bancroft yeah did you think that one was what 18 19 I think yeah I've got a lovely scorecard for
your Wolletton versus rockin and manger actually while his club cam bancroft 10 you got 102
there you go so I'll be honest that is the only scorecard that I love out scored him in
I had a shocker I had a shocker over that I think that that was the only 50 plus score I got
and I'm pretty sure I averaged about 15 and I got 100 you got dropped you got dropped a second grade
and you got 61 so well done there yeah I think I'm bold in the second go I've also seen
as well yeah I'll be honest when I when I went over there I was still very very mature so I
I didn't I didn't go to training much I spent most of my time lifting weights on the beach
and then drinking um nice it was a good I you know I grew up because I that was first time I'd
lived on my own so I got there I lived with some other players that were in county cricket like
young players I can't agree it so I had a great time but yeah I certainly wasn't I wasn't great
for the club I'll be honest I'm 0.4 7.4 overs 4 for 32 yeah but that then I wasn't being paid
to to play those and I just went over there and the academy I got gifted to a club yeah so it's
very different if you're over there as a youngster and you've been given to a club compared to
like being shipped over yeah it's being paid for like then you've got to switch on you know that's
your responsibility is to go over there and do well um I was just a young kid he was pushed
towards this club and told you got a play for him um so was that with the buster sure academy
sent basically send you over there is that how it works so yeah I went over there was at the time
guy called Paul Terry who ran the academy so I basically just went over there trained in the
week with them all week basically so I was there to do that academy and then I was gifted like
basically given a club so that was the club cricket wasn't in my mind the main event it was the
training the gym work all of that stuff was the main event which probably was why I was a bit
useless and it's really weird sometimes it's these calls or these recordings then we did it
there's a real full circle there you're you're playing against rocking a mandra as you said
Tee Gwiley's club what are friends of our our part big time can bancroft
friend of our part Rory Hayden took his very first first class wicket and he was can bancroft
playing for Gostershire I think or was it global Gostershire at the time I can't remember um
I think it would have been yeah yeah and it's like Rory took that wicket it's like full circle
there you could have put them together even better you probably did you try there did you make
no no no you had another season over there 2013 14 Melbourne as well so was that was that
were you more grown up there and that was it you didn't get a hundred year very much more
consistent season there yeah yeah I was I was more grown up now I went over there my partner as
well so I couldn't but yeah no I had a good time over there I enjoyed it she was lucky enough
to play quite a bit of cricket Marcus Loenus who was he was very early on in his career so I think
he hadn't played a first class game I don't think can you I remember playing with him and just
thinking Jesus this guy is next level I like they they raved about him but I'd never really heard of
him and I sort of like record he hadn't done anything I was like surely this guy can't be as good
as they're saying and he was elite and then I think he got his first hundred for
four fix when I was when I was out there yeah he scares me I'm scared of Marcus Loenus he's a big
unit isn't he yeah he's a big he's a really nice guy though really really nice guy but yeah he's
he's a big lad and did this help you know do these winters help you or they just they're just a lot
of fun when you're pro cricket you know that is you know rather than you know the backpackers they're
obviously yeah they are fun I think the the cricket is really it's tough like obviously they joke
over there and say are you know first class cricket is similar to great cricket blah blah blah they
say that but and it's not like it's not but they take it so seriously yeah it almost like
is a bit of a shock for someone from the UK when you play club cricket in the UK
you you play you have a bit of fun you're trying to do your best but it's not like they don't take
it that seriously and then you go to wars and it's literally like you're playing international cricket
like yeah train being fitness you're doing all this your team talks everyone's shouting each other
coach is shouting at you you make a wrong decision you get shouted out you're like what is going on
it I came over it's get some sunshine hits the ball lovingly it's like I'm getting shouted at
more than one I'll play back for Gloucester like it is a bit of a shock it is they take it very very
serious and I think that like intensity can like catch you out a little bit do the Aussies bring
that when they come and play and when you play with Australians over the years is that does that
sort of leak out of them when they're playing or actually is that so just it contained within
great cricket I think it's just containing great cricket if I'm honest like you get Aussies over here
come play cat cricket in the real children it's like you're relaxed yeah and then great cricket they
just they just lose their heads and you know what we spoke to Jordan so two years ago and he found
it exactly the same he came over here and played Premier League cricket just thought this is great
this is turn up play cricket enjoy myself yeah and you know obviously our Premier League cricket is
not quite Premier Slash great cricket over in Australia but he recognized the difference there
definitely so let's talk about what you're doing right now though Chris because obviously you've
come out of it the professional game I like any professional you've got to do something else down
you know you still in your mid thirties with the utmost respect you're of an age that you weren't
there when all the bloody big monies come through so you know you haven't heard all you haven't
heard a harry broke 400 thousand for six weeks work you know come on you've set up the academy now
I'm going to just say so then straight away to you you're having a lot of bloody fun with your academy
and your videos and your reels that you put together and you Mr. Dent are trying to hit the ball harder
hell of a lot more argue yeah no yeah I think I've hit more balls this winter I've ever hit
winter like I wasn't a massive fan of hitting during the winter and obviously making videos etc
yeah I'm just I'm just trying to obviously I'm doing a lot coaching one to one's group stuff which
is the serious stuff but with the social media I'm just trying to have a bit of fun with it really
and just you know make something interesting that people want to watch I don't know if they do
but like it's just something different I don't want to preach on there about you know elbow here
foot here that I just I was one hour fun with it and and you know like when I'm doing all these
hitting stuff because I'm trying to specialize a bit in power hitting it was something that
over COVID I did a lot trying to specialize a bit in that when I'm doing these like I'm I'm learning
as I'm doing them like I'm I'm finding drills from baseball other sports and I'm testing them out
I'm trying to what see if they work if they don't and I think that's one of the advantages I've got
of the minute is I'm obviously still young enough and fit enough to to do this stuff so I can
explore it rather than just saying this is what you got to do yeah I'm trying to actually do it
and see if it works so yeah I'm enjoying it and it's it's a lot of fun trying to whack it I've got
it tiring every now and then I wake up a bit of a sore back but um now it's good fun
baseball is a wonderful sort of resource because they've had what 150 years of money thrown at
them and and you know people have have spent an awful lot of money going down a lot of rabbit holes
to try and get um you know the edge um and it's money that cricket doesn't have so you know
basically you can tap into research that's that's you know and like you say it will it work will
it work you know is there anything specific that you've picked out recently that's really from
from baseball or you know that the really feel is there's maybe missing in cricket yeah there's
there's a few things and you're right baseball is great because they research it they they try and
they're always trying to progress whereas I feel like cricket just well the whole time I play
I just felt like everything was always the same like you're always saying you train the same you're
like nothing really like progress that much so yeah baseball's great because like you said there's
so much information I think some of the stuff I've been looking at which again like I said I'm
trying to work out how relevant it isn't cricket because obviously it is different but at the end
of the day you know you're still hitting a ball so like the element still apply but things that
I've seen about like swing quickness which is is basically how quickly you can go from deciding
to hit the ball to actually launching your swing and I think in baseball they're very good at
they're getting a position early and then as soon as they want to swing they can swing whereas in
cricket we're getting like an okay position and then we say oh I want to hit the ball now I've
got to take my back up I've got to do this and it's all just very slow yeah and then also just
like the actual position you're getting into I just feel like especially in t20 a lot of batters
just try and have the same stance or the same whereas you're not trying to fall anyone like the
bowlers know you're trying to whack them everyone knows you're trying to whack them why aren't we
getting in like a better power position early to be able to hit it I use an example of golf like
he wouldn't hit your driver in your putting stance so like why are we getting in the same stance
we always do to try and hit six when we can actually earlier get into a nice strong powerful
position so I've been doing a bit of stuff with some professionals I've been working on it and
and it's yeah I'm just really interested in like just what we can add to cricket looking at
baseball but like I said it has to it has to work like there's a lot of things that won't work
because you know you're not just getting full tosses outside off are you the guinea pig and
are you the guinea pig for all this stuff you guinea pig yourself yeah yeah I'm pretty pretty much
I'll tell you what I've spent an arm and a leg on on hitting aides from America because everything
you can't get anything from the UK there's nothing so I have to buy all this stuff for America and
I'm just yeah it hurts but I want to I'm willing to invest in like trying to just find
some different different ways of training or different training work
Christens baseball surplus.com for all the x the broken yeah it's really interesting you say
that I'm going to use a football analogy that I was reading about yesterday did there's a great
big thing out there right now about Arsenal and the set pieces and you know how'd you defend this
and how'd you do it and the Premier League has gone mad for set pieces this year as we know
and then a great article I've been saying the same thing to the telly day weekend week out
and a great article about I can't remember which non league side it was who were facing the
same thing with all putting all these plays into the box so what the manager did he went all
school he said well I'm going to put five people on the halfway line and if I put five of my
players on the halfway line they've got to leave six back and change in the thinking rather than
to go back to cricket I'm going to stand the way I've been taught I'm going to get my head over
the ball I'm going to get my elbow high all the stuff that let's be honest level two three four
and coaches are going to tell you actually it's the same all the way through when you can pick up
so many things from other sports I'm a big believer that hockey is a huge win for many many
cricketers and one of our absolute local superstars here Mr Wayne Madison you know he paid hockey for
South Africa and you can see it and when you see these players now do this bloody no look flick of
her but Madness was doing that ten years ago you know it this is not something new is it Chris
no no I think it's just yeah it's just been highlighted a bit more now is it on the on the big stage
you know yeah like you said who is it Mau Loy was it used to sweep the scene yes
years ago and then suddenly people do it now like this is crazy but that was when I started that's
that's what he did you know that's what so I just think yeah on the big stage it just gets like
and obviously now people are willing to learn these skills back then it was like what's he doing
like why is he doing that whereas now it's like someone does something's like right we need to be
I do that you know so everyone's learning these skills now whereas it was just the few that did it
back then yeah so the flip side of the T20 stuff is it is there evidence or you know particularly
from the pro game that that actually focusing on the T20 in terms of maybe muscle groups and and
shot does it then impact on to the Red Bull stuff for these guys that you know maybe lose something
in the Red Bull game or do you think it generally benefits then obviously there might be moments
where they have a big a big swash when they shouldn't do but Harry Brook but yeah yeah I think
I think it generally does because realistically when it comes back to transition in from T20 to
Red Bull it it becomes more of a mental thing you know are you willing to to rein it in and back
long but you know improving hand speed improving your how hard you hit the ball when you're attacking
like can only then benefit but it's yes the decision making that really is the standout in Red Bull
cricket and also you'll be surprised how many times when once you get in and you're on I don't know
let's say you're lucky enough to be on 120 you do start putting the pressure back on the opposition
and then if you can go from 120 to 250 quick like you've taken the game away from them they're done
and I think you know that's what the great players do when they're in they just dominate the game
and that's what you know like your pizzas you're those sort of guys once they got in they just
dominated so being able to do that I think can only be a benefit. Bethel the other day was a great
example because that hundred a hit it was a it would have looked out of place particularly on a
on a four day game it was it was orthodox it was yeah it was just yeah it was just on a different
planet in terms of how what he was doing and he's any you could just take you know any of those
shots and put them in any of the formats and they'd still be good cricket shots. Yeah I think
what you maybe think of their Christian particular is that and I've told the story of the part of
Wildbach I was talking to a gentleman who coached a certain Paul Barrington for many years
who played a Darbyshire and has played in our league and Darbyshire in particular for many years now
and he said never never be surprised to see Paul being 30 not out after 30 overs no problem
look where he's at the end though you know that 30 not out he's all of a sudden 70 80 90 in that
last 20 80 and he's pushing on and he's doing it and that's proper old school red ball cricket but
I just say you're able to then flip that pressure straight back onto the opposition aren't you?
No definitely that's what I always found like I felt was one of my strengths when I when I played
as I was willing to to like so cut pressure because I knew that when I'm in at the back end I'll catch
up and you know I think that's just having like a confidence in yourself that the majority of the
time you will catch up and yeah the old time you won't but when you panic thinking of I need to go
I need to strike it 70 in red ball whereas actually you can strike it 30 and then by the end
you're innings you're striking it 67 and absolutely nobody looks back they just look at the end result
America leads the world in medicine development it matters we get new medicines first nearly three
years faster five million Americans go to work because we make medicines here at home and not
relying on other countries keeps us safe but China is racing to overtake us will we let them or will
we choose to stay ahead when America leads America cures let's tell Washington to keep us in the lead
learn how at America cures dot com pay for by pharma get in the game with the college branded
Venmo debit card record team with every tap and earn up to five percent cash back with Venmo stash
a new rewards program from Venmo no monthly fee no minimum balance just school pride and spending
power get in the game and sign up for the Venmo debit card at Venmo dot com slash college card
the Venmo master card is issued by the bank court bank NA select schools available Venmo stash
terms and exclusions apply at Venmo dot me slash stash terms max 100 dollars cash back per month
now you just said something historic they said when I played well let's get some more
do straight you ain't stopped because our friends at Calington I've asked you to come down and
play in the club or leave this coming summer I've got to ask did you have a number of clubs going
do you want to come on again again um yeah I quite a few because I think you become more
people are more interested in you when you stop playing fishing because obviously you're
only allowed to turn them out but obviously in the in the Cornwall league we're only allowed one
player that's played over 10 first-class games it's over 20s so I think they do the difference
everywhere yeah yeah so like in the weapon if you retire suddenly you're just a normal player and
you become very valuable to people but um yeah so I had quite a lot of clubs they want me to do
like coaching and thinking and I to be honest I was planning on just not playing if I'm honest
I thought after played I was like do I really need this but then I started doing my coaching
hitting and I was like maybe maybe playing won't be too bad so I think that that sort of got me
back into it and then they sort of messaged at a good time they caught me on a on a high when I was
enjoying it so what did Mr Joe White and the Calington boys say to you that convinced you that's
the place to go to um I just think to be honest I just liked the thought of a a bit of a fresh start
you know I wasn't going to play probably ideally didn't really want to then just play for another
club locally because you know I've played for a long time yeah um and then obviously I knew that
Max was coached there and I've played with him a lot and and against him a lot so yeah I just
felt like it'd be a nice change and obviously I'm I'm going down there on Fridays to do some
coaching with their young batters and then I stay over so it becomes a little bit of a yeah an event
like like when you play County cricket when you stay over you know you play some cricket um yeah
I just think that the change was was what I wanted yeah and terms of standards what are you
thinking you're going to meet down in the Cornwall League compared to your day-to-day playing for
Gloucester or even what you know of the weapon you're locally from what I've heard from my
information this is like a similar standard for weapon but I've heard Calington's pictures in the
greatest um I'm going to tell you I'm going to tell you what a bowler said to me this morning
who played in the Cornwall League last year he's playing on a pudding yeah so I think yeah
the the wickets could be interesting but then when I played for Thornebury you obviously in the
first division of the weapon you get to play on some nice wickets you know bath roster these all
wickets no whereas when you drop down into the the like second division weapon which I've played
some years with Thornebury with you you go to some ropey grounds so you you sort of work out how
you need to play on not great wickets and also I when I when I go over to Cape Town playing South
Africa um I've done it three times you you come up on some pretty not great ones because they can't
a lot of time they're not allowed to walk the wickets sometimes so it's not going to be the top you
got to get used to that so yeah I'm actually I'm looking forward to the challenge of that to be
honest like you know you play on a good wicket 120's a good score for a battle you play on a bad
wicket 60 is a match winning score so you just got to change your your standards to what you're
playing on effectively you've played a lot with Thornebury over the last looking back here since 2004
and 5000 runs on the play cricket scorecard you know why why were you so happy to keep dipping back
do you not feel like you know you know what mid of the summer I'm a pro I'll just have a day off here
um well I played a lot more for them more back end of my career when I when I wasn't playing as much
for Gloucester and I just think it's nice to to gal and bat and and score runs like I remember I
think it was a 2019 season when we got promoted and that was one of my best seasons I kept going
back and playing for me I just think like just continuing to bat and score runs no matter what level
yeah is good you know it just keeps you in a rhythm of like bang a long time assessing conditions
like having pride in in performing I just felt like it was it was actually good for my game um
and yeah I enjoyed it and I was you know lucky enough to get some some decent scores for him and
and when you get in and you're you're whacking him there's no better feeling than
than that effectively there's a there's a reasonable a nice scorecard from last year um
Thornebury versus Sir Torntons and Andrews uh you got uh 149 off hundred and seven balls and on
the Torntons and Andrews team we've got Archie Vaughn out for 24 Thomas Rue out for 23 GGG sit there
you know this was not short you know just a few day short of your retirement just so again
yeah I still got it still got it better than these lads you know it is it is nice to show some of
the like the young up and coming lads that I can still play yeah that's nice um yeah that's
like the pride you have in yourself you want to you still want to show people that you you've
still got it and and why you had a successful career you know it's nice to to show that but
saying that that was the first time I saw Thomas Rue play he didn't get that many but I remember
the rain was coming in um in the end it got rained off I think but the rain was coming in he just
he hit like three two or three sixes effortlessly and I thought this this kid's a good player
he's a good player and they're not honestly we've seen he's a very very good player very proud of
what we hear on this show that it's over two years since we put said his name oh two years yeah
it was sort of it's the last six months his name's been everywhere we just keep putting out
they're saying well if you listen back two years ago plus we were telling you about this one
it was so bloody obvious and then Lloyd Ali our friend at Torntons and say Andrews was the one
who said yeah with utmost respect he's probably a better player than his brother yeah I think he's
brother said that as well didn't he yeah I think he's like he seems more naturally talented but
James Rue he reminds me a bit of James Bracey like they yes they've just got that like real grit
and determination yeah and like they not like always look the nicest in the nicest way possible
because they they do play nice shots but they've just got this they just got something about them
that just wants to always get rough yes you want them both in your side because they give you
something different don't they but question I was going to ask you and it was great hearing that
would do yourself Archie and Tom was all played in the same game just think it would be far better
for the county game as a whole and clearly the Premier League's out there as well if far more
players did do what you did there and did drop down to the Premier League's because
yeah you're talking about this many percent still Chris that actually dropped down do you think
it would be far better for the game generally yeah I think so I think I remember when I started
for me it felt like there was like always yeah those older professionals the guys that just left the
game they were playing it felt like a really high standard and I remember when when John Bracey
was our coach back in the day it used to be you get assigned to a club obviously I was home
growing so I was at Thornbree and it was like right this weekend everyone's playing right off you go
and it was like non-negotiable you can go now go over go on sorto they're gonna you're off go go
play and you just got told to do it whereas now it's not quite the same I think the problem is
back in there I felt like there were a lot of bowlers that would play whereas now like bowlers
are obviously just wrapped in cotton ball and they can't go and play which is like for a club
I understand you know they're very valuable um but yeah I think like adding if those bowlers
were to play then yeah you know you get those youngsters that get some exposure against those guys
it's it's things that you look back on when you get older and think I played against it in my face
team I face that you know um yeah I can't believe I'm saying this the second time this week
our favorite story from last year a certain Mr Richard Gleason rocket up to play for Blackpool
in a car that got broken down on the m61 I think it was or 60 if I had it on the way up to Carl
Isle but they still ended up going up there Blackpool and that's he's back playing with this club
you know and you know our friend Mr Matt's half loves it when Gleason turns up for nets I think
I'm sure he's not covering his total full pace but but actually does it it's a great argument
that you can have year in year out isn't it do you keep going and keep the form going and keep the
would you rest um and with you as a batter I think batters just need to batter as much as they
bloody well can bowlers difficult isn't it yeah but I'm even hearing now that wicket keepers are
told not to play in case they've damaged their fingers I mean that's the problem isn't it now like
the more money that comes into the game the more valuable are these everybody other than
you can understand with why counties would be like it because they're their assets you know like
if someone gets injured you've got to probably pay to get someone low and blow a blow but
but yeah I guess back in the day it was just less there was less sort of
moddy coddling if that's the the right saying there was there was less of that back in the day
oh 100% is the right word I think the nice thing is we were able last year to see the likes
of course I can sort of roll out in the sorry championship um you know the word gratitude
happened there but we've also seen the last year or two and it's our favorite subject in the
world is more players from Premier League and end of lca starting to sneak the way into that first
class and get signed etc yeah do you fancy playing a bit of end of lca yourself this summer
um it's you know I've thought about it and there's a chance I might play a little bit for for
formal while I'm down in Calington they've got a one day cup game so there's been some conversations
I'm not 100% sure whether it's over the line or anything like that but you know while I'm down
there I thought you know give it a go um I haven't ever played any minor county stuff before I
boxy played against minor counties but um no I've never I've never played any of it so it'll be
it'll be a new experience for me um I'll be honest I the longer for my I've been popped by
because everyone says that you play whatever 120 overs and and the thought of that makes my body
sore just sat here but um but I'm sure it's different because I hear you a lot of spin gets bold
so it gets gets through the overs a lot quicker than you're doing county cricket when you take
you do 96 over the day and you end up finishing up half seven at night yeah um so yeah I'm sure
it's so they get through it a bit quicker you just nailed the next question so why is that though
why is it that there's so much more spin and we've just done an article only a couple of weeks go
human eye with wisdom about left arm spinners and spinners generally in prebally cricket and the
amount that's being bold why is that not transitioning to first class cricket why we're not seeing so
many more because let's be honest England approved time and time again that we can't play spin um
so why wouldn't you want to practice against it is it is it is it just filtered through the county
system that it's got to be seam seam seam seam seam I think if I'm honest I just think most of the
wickets in the county circuit just they don't suit spin but you go to to obviously test grounds
a bit different you know this is harder it bounces more but everywhere else like you could have
the world's best spinner and they're not going to set the world alike so yeah why would you
bowl loads and loads of spin when it's not really going to take any wickets so
I just think that's the only real reason to be honest like we obviously lucky times that
for a few years and he's like a quality quality spinner yeah and he was he was still very good on
flat wickets but like there's no respect now if you got a spinner on a flat wicket and you're
batting you think right here we go let's get let's get 34 as quickly as I can and then the seam
comes back on like if it's not conducive then there's there's no real value in bowl and
them loads of overs and whereas if you go to club ground you go to you know non-professional grounds
breaks up a bit more it's a bit softer so it's been so actually there's value in it yeah I was
down at Darbyshire yesterday and we got showbyshire in there I'd never seen him before in the first
actually he's absolutely massive he's incredibly tall and you know I'm just waiting for Darbyshire
to roll out those sort of Pakistani self fans that they had if you remember at the test match they
had the fans at both end of the contest didn't they they've got the heat lamp out there at the moment
on the ground but they've they've got I'm waiting for the big fans so hopefully showbyshire I'll
sign for you if you get the big big fans out to dry the head out of that wicket so I can actually
take some wickets and we'll see I I think we might get a spinning wicket at Darbyshire.
I think they're allowed to do that with a hundred money as well because that's infrastructure
so you're allowed to spend that money up yeah you can go ahead and find that one yeah
deal good eating yeah if Neil Goddrich is listening get onto it man you need to get on
Amazon to get some of these big fans behind the bowls don't you definitely we we tried it a few
times at Gloucester but it's such a fine line because the groundsmen are like real wary of it
because obviously it's their pitch that gets rated down and if you go too far you're getting
trouble if you don't go enough you're like what's the point and you've played all these finishes
it's a real fine line it's really tricky um because obviously you see like when some of us
said did it when they had leeching best and they just went too far with it and and you get
points and all of this so it's it's a real fine balance yeah um and it's it's a tricky one to get
right I it's a fine balance but I I agree with you know Somerset maybe push the envelope shall we say
a little bit one to twice but I will forever be thankful for Somerset for them but absolutely
taking Surrey to task not last season this season before when Surrey flew someone in for a one
game loan and Archie Vaughn it was in particular talk of a part and I'm like because I think the
loan system my personal be the loan system for one and two games is a joke um you know to be it
you've got plays in the pathways you've got plays in the twos and just not getting the chance
because you're bringing one or two in and especially in Surrey yeah yeah I think Surrey with their
team million yeah the small counties I understand like you don't you have a few injuries you need to
look elsewhere but for Surrey you know they're most weeks they're deciding which 11 out of the
15 international players they want to play you know in which four are going to take the suits yeah exactly
let me come towards the end of our chat Chris I just wrote a couple of things I want to go
around with you so go back to your academy yeah I converse for you on LinkedIn about public how
close are you to getting a permanent venue for yourself now because I know that's something you've
been looking for um yeah so we've sort of been looking at different places actually maybe going
in with a couple of other players from Gloucester just right as a bit of a joint business so
we're like we're quite close to pulling the trigger and finding somewhere but it's just
basically working out financially it's Bristol's obviously quite an expensive place so like a space
big enough for four lanes with other stuff is is very expensive so we're just sort of like
working out if it's the right time to take the risk and go for it or not but like that is my
my ultimate goal as I want to have a place to run all my coaching from even like the content
creating the content being able to do that like it's like I've got a book out of lane to go wax
and balls and create is I want to make everything nice and easy you know I want to do as much
coaching as I can I want to set up a academy I want to make the content and to do that
like at the end of the I need a venue so that is the plan it's just
working out if now's the time to fire basically get that one over the line but then the summer
looks like a mixture of coaching content Joe's going to love you at Calington for that
I'm playing for Calington you know it's going to be a busy summer still low isn't it
yeah I think so it's probably a feel busier because I'm doing so many different things and you're
sort of like right out of the minute I'm doing all sorts of different coaching I'm a mine
feels a bit frazzled because I used to just get given a timetable right turn up here turn up here
turn up here it's very very different but yeah I'm looking forward to I'm looking forward to just
doing all different stuff because also I've got a family coffee trade business as well so I work as
a barista in that probably twice a week at the minute and then in the summer we work at the
create ground and all sorts so I'll be in there as well so I've got to chuck that into it um
it'll be yeah it'll be busy but rewarding and I'm I'm looking forward to seeing where
where it takes me surely the two have to combine that I mean you've got to basically run the coffee shop
and attach it to the the curriculum so I'm sure that's crossed your mind yeah sure I mean coffee shop
you know it's just a way of bringing people into the coffee shop you need you need um people with large
families so they have to sit there and then they can drink anything yeah I need to bore them enough
so they that's not doing they just drink loads and loads of coffee yeah I think the problem is I'm
I'm a bit of a stickler I like to be on the machines I'll be struggling to to throw balls and make
coffees at the same time sorry if it's not right I'm not I'm not sure that's the man with
is going to make billions in coffee if you're the one that has to pour it there's no no no that's
the problem I need to relinquish some responsibility to other people yeah I was and that was the
sort of the final question I was going to ask is that that change from professional to non-professional
and that mixing what you're doing it really out obvious question it's a massive change
but it feels like you're enjoying it mate yeah no I am I think look my I didn't play loads
during the back couple years in my career and I'd started up the coffee trailer and I was doing
coaching so like although I finished last year it feels like I've transitioned a bit um but like I
yeah I'm just enjoying it almost feels like you know like I've got so many options to explore I'm not
saying they're all going to be the right ones but I feel like I've got control and I can I can do
what I want you know um after so many years of playing cricket and there were times I enjoyed
their times I weren't you know which happens but now I feel like I've got freedom to to go down
different avenues and try different things yeah I think from our perspective we welcome you to
the Premier League speakers yeah we're you know there's seven half thousand players playing
Premier League cricket around the country last year um now unfortunately for me I know far more
Premier League players than county names would you believe but it's great to have someone who's
done that step straight back and say I want to play and he's going to enjoy that cricket and
I think what you will do at Callington with the boys down there if you're going to enjoy it aren't you?
Yeah I've heard there are a good bunch of guys and I'm obviously some some good players down
there as well so um yeah it should be fun I think we've got Penn's Ants first game which
I know from what I've heard is they have sort of everyone in the Cornwall league's rival
so that should be that should be a good introduction
we're good friends with both set of clubs and I'm full enough the Penn's Ants skip has been in
such this week they've got some signings coming out it looks like the sign Ben Fletcher in the
last couple of days he's going to be down there but they're not last year the year before
Callington and Penn's Ants were like that all the way through to the end of the season weren't they
you yeah it's interesting I mean it's do you have the same when you're playing for somebody like
Callington or you know you have the same sort of pre-game routines or do you just so much more
relaxed now than than you used to be I like try and be more relaxed because I felt like I was
quite an uptight cricket for a while like I was very routine based like you know so I'd try and
just be more relaxed and not get too stressed until I need to be stressed you know when I'm facing
that first fall you've got you know you've got to get that yeah that stress is at the same
is it the same whether it's you know I think a lot of time really because like
there's there's that slight more expectation you know you're playing category there's obviously
especially to do well but you're you know you're playing category if the someone gets you out
that's that's life whereas there's that little bit more expectation I think the more a lot of
a lot of the time is I've I've traveled abroad and I'm you know it's slightly different because
they're literally paying you to be there they're paying a lot of money if you to be there you're like
I've got to be well in it who's slightly different so hopefully I can be a bit more relaxed but
yeah I like to try and just relax and enjoy a bit because otherwise
otherwise it's the same as playing professional cricket you know where you're just
stressed all the time absolutely you've got a great bunch down there at Callington to be relaxed Joe
is an absolute top guy Matt Thompson one of big friends of show Tom has gone down to play at Callington
now he's he's taking that step up to the Premier League as well so look forward to seeing how you
get on there we've got to ask you a final question and it's loaded it's a loaded question
please comment on Wizard the Wicked Keeper and his batting style
that's an interesting one because actually I was made into a video with him you know the one
he did with with Trees and Jack Lee I was made into it but then I ended up being busy on that day so I
couldn't um you know it's it's very much club cricket style isn't it but hey you know I like
what he's trying to do it's quite exactly right now yourself and yourself and Oli are without
a shadow the two content creators who are absolutely rocking it with what's going on there so I'm
going to ask you very openly when it comes to the content creators club later on this season you
are officially a content creator Mr. Christen if you're playing on the Sunday of the content creators
club do you reckon I'll be able to draft you in to come and play for someone maybe I thought
it's it's a maybe um yeah I feel like although I'm creating content I don't I don't have the
uh I'm not quite as charismatic on cameras they are I'm a bit more like subdued so I don't know
whether I'd fit in that well in the actual content part yeah I'd probably enjoyed to to hit some
balls and bowl them up but yeah those two years to put our videos out because we just put it on
podcast previously we're exactly the same yeah yeah absolutely brilliant catching up Chris
really look forward to seeing how you get down on and call more if you turn out in that end double
CA we'll be keeping an eye out on that one that'll be really interesting and try to think cut well
call ball versus Devon is always in the same group so that'll be a good one to say the least and
look forward to seeing how you get I just enjoy it mate it's really great to see that smile on
your face they enjoy what you're doing right now thank you very much I appreciate that and
and thanks for having me on have you really enjoyed it absolutely pleasure mate
hi this is Alex Cantrowitz I'm the host of big technology podcast a longtime reporter and an
on air contributor to CNBC and if you're like me you're trying to figure out how artificial
intelligence is changing the business world and our lives so each week on big technology I bring
on key actors from companies building AI tech and outsiders trying to influence it asking where
this is all going they come from places like Nvidia Microsoft Amazon and plenty more so if you
want to be smart with your wallet your career choices and meetings with your colleagues and at
dinner parties listen to big technology podcast wherever you get your podcasts with the American
Express Platinum Card I can unlock experiences like no other since I'm always booking my next trip
I'd love that I can earn points on travel plus I get a resume benefit so you know I'm hitting the
restaurants everyone's talking about and you can find out your welcome offer after you apply
which could be as high as 175,000 points for experiences like no other there's nothing like Platinum
learn more at americanexpress.com slash explore dash Platinum terms apply
The National Counties Cricket Show



