Ambrose checks in
It looked like he had been passed over in favour of his former team-mate Matt Prior. Not quite. Tim Ambrose is England's surprise choice for the wicketkeeper's spot in the squad for New Zealand
Andrew Miller
05-Jan-2008
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Tim Ambrose and Matt Prior have been friends and rivals ever since
they first played together at Sussex in the summer of 2001, but deep
down they always knew that, as two men competing for the same
wicketkeeping position, one of them would have to win out in the end.
In the summer of 2005, when Ambrose packed his bags and left for
Warwickshire after two difficult seasons in Prior's shadow, it looked
as though the argument had finally been settled. At Lord's on Friday,
however, the tables were turned in spectacular fashion.
"I'm a little bit surprised but thrilled," said Ambrose, after
learning that he had been earmarked for a Test debut at Prior's
expense, when England begin their three-match series against New
Zealand on March 5. "I'm a little bit numb and for now I'm just
letting it sink in before focusing on the job. Matt and I have always
had a healthy competition - I wouldn't call it a rivalry because he's
a good friend of mine, so I feel for him and I'm sure he'll be very
disappointed at the moment."
Prior's performances in Sri Lanka were wholehearted but sadly flawed,
with the nadir coming at Galle where he dropped three crucial chances,
all diving to his right. Despite his undoubted success with the bat -
he has averaged in excess of 40 in his first ten Tests - those misses
took his tally for the year into double figures. For the selectors who
are still intent on finding a long-term successor to Alec Stewart, it
is a catalogue of errors that cannot be ignored any longer.
Mind you, Prior has never pretended that wicketkeeping was his first
love - batting was always No. 1 for him, and he only stumbled on the
keeping role by accident as a teenager, when a junior team-mate failed
to turn up for a match. Ambrose, on the other hand, presents himself
as a gloveman first and foremost. "I've always kept since the first
game I played, so it's always been a major, major part of my game," he
said. "I take a lot of pride in it, and I thoroughly enjoy it. It's why I play the game."
A glance at the bald statistics would tend to tell the same tale.
Ambrose has managed just four first-class centuries in seven seasons,
and none at all in his final three years at Sussex. In 2003, the year
in which the county secured their first Championship title, he played
a vital role with 931 runs and a top score of 93 not out, but in 2004
and 2005 his form fell away as Prior seized the role of top dog. "We
knew from a long way out that one of us would have to go elsewhere to
try and pursue our dreams," said Ambrose. "The opportunity came up for
me at Warwickshire and I received good support in making that move.
Sussex were very helpful and understood the situation, and it's worked
out well for us."
It wasn't, however, the first time that Ambrose had upped sticks to
further his career. He was born and brought up in New South Wales,
the son of an English mother and Australian father, but at the age of
17 made a leap of faith and emigrated to England. "I had played
junior levels for NSW U17s, but I always felt the opportunity to keep
wicket and bat in that situation was against my favour, so when the
opportunity came up to come over here I grabbed it."
Ambrose sent off letters to various counties asking for a trial, and
received replies from Hampshire and Sussex, with whom he spent his
first three days in England after landing from Sydney. "My trial
started the morning after I got off the plane, so it was a pretty
shotgun thing," he said. "I was looking to explore the world really,
and experience new things, and also to play some cricket. In that
first year Sussex asked me to play and offered me a contract, and
obviously I'd have to be a fool to pass up. It's resulted in me having
a great life here for the last seven or eight years."
The Ashes are looming in 2009, and are the obvious target for every
English cricketer with international aspirations, but Ambrose insisted
there would be no conflict of allegiance if he ever got the chance to
play. "I've lived all my adult life here, and this is my home," he
said. "All my friends are here, and I haven't even been to Australia
for a few years. I'll be very pleased and proud to have opportunity to
represent my country.
"My mother and all her family were born in England and went to
Australia to seek opportunities," he added. "She was fairly young,
around 15 or 16, so it's similar to the age I was when I came back
here. I've spoken to quite a few of them this morning, as they've been
very supportive of me for the last seven or eight years."
The Ashes are looming in 2009, and are the obvious target for every English cricketer with international aspirations, but Ambrose, who was born in New South Wales, insisted there would be no conflict of allegiance if he ever got the chance to play | |||
How equipped for success is Ambrose likely to be? If any man
should know, it would have to be England's head coach, Peter Moores,
the man who offered that Sussex contract back in 2001. "I'm a big fan
of Peter, as everyone who's worked with him is," said Ambrose. "He's
an excellent manager and coach, and he'll be great to help with my
keeping, confidence, and every aspect of the game. I'm very much
looking forward to reuniting with him."
It was to Moores that Ambrose turned when he realised his time at
Sussex was running out. "He was very supportive, because he realised
that it was going to be the case for one of us," said Ambrose.
"Obviously he wanted to make sure that whichever one of us did make
the move, it was the right thing to do, at the right time and the
right place. I spent five or six years under his guidance, and I
attribute a lot of my success and learning experience in the early
part of my career to him."
And yet, because of Prior's claims, Moores was never able to offer
Ambrose a long-term role as wicketkeeper. Judging by the drama of this
selection, he still hasn't quite made up his mind. Once again, the
spotlight is set to burn furiously on England's latest No. 7 when the
New Zealand series gets underway.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo