'A shame if none of the current team played Tests'
Niall and Kevin O'Brien talk about their formative years in Dublin and reflect on their contribution to the giant strides Ireland have made in recent years

The talented O'Briens: pillars of Irish cricket for close to a decade • AFP
Kevin: Not really, I was probably quite late in thinking along those lines. I'd played for Ireland all the way up in age-group cricket but there weren't too many Irish cricketers playing professionally in England - in fact Ed Joyce was the only one. It wasn't until I was about 18 that I realised I might have a bit of talent, then I kicked on and played at the 2004 Under-19 World Cup and never really looked back.
N: Because I was a batsman and keeper and at that stage Kev was just a bowler there was never that direct competition. I was trying to get catches and stumpings off his bowling - chirping away and putting on a silly voice behind the stumps - and he was pulling Darren Gough expressions as he was running in to bowl. He was an opening bowler, and a really good one. We used to call him Shaun Pollock because he looked a bit like him and had that nagging line and length, with that little bit of away movement. But back then Kev was never really one to put in the hard graft. He liked playing the matches but he was more than happy chilling out playing computer games, whereas I was always wanting to get out to the nets or the garden and play.
N: Yeah, I couldn't tell anyone at school I played cricket. The schools I went to were very Irish schools - hurling, rugby, Gaelic football - and cricket was seen as an English sport. Cricket in the village where we lived was fine but at school you had to keep it on the down low. In my last year I was picked to play for Ireland Under-19s at the 2000 World Cup and the principal announced it over the tannoy. Everyone looked around at me and started giving me quizzical looks. No one even knew I played!
N: We were always close but when I was about 14 or 15 I wasn't really enjoying school and I was making a nuisance of myself in the village, getting in trouble with the police; whereas Kevin was a good lad and kept himself to himself.
Ireland's magical St Patrick's day in 2007
The 2007 World Cup marked a watershed moment for Irish cricket, as Ireland defeated Pakistan in perhaps the biggest shock in the tournament's history to qualify for the Super 8 stage. In a low-scoring encounter, a partnership of 38 between Niall (72) and Kevin (16 not out) proved crucial as the underdogs chased down their target of 133 with three wickets to spare.
K: I was happy to play second fiddle. I was still relatively new to international cricket so I was just taking it all in and trying to stay in as long as I could while Nialler batted so well. It's probably the best he's ever batted in an Ireland shirt. And what a time to do it…
N: It's kind of strange when you think of Kev batting like that now [16 from 52 balls] because these days he'd be on 60 or 70. He played the conditions. The wicket was tricky, the ball was doing plenty and it was hard work against a good attack.
K: Nialler is full of life when he's batting - wired - and I'm the complete opposite. I just like to chill out. I think he was doing all the talking and I was just telling him to relax. I'm certainly the more laidback of the two of us, in all walks of life I suppose. Sometimes it's a good asset, other times it can be a disadvantage, but I think that's probably why we're so close and why we work so well together.
N: It was 2007 when things really kicked off for Irish cricket. It put us on the map and most of the young lads that play with us now - George Dockrell, Paul Stirling - say that watching that match in their living room inspired them to go and play. That's what it's all about.
N: It was quite strange, really. It took me getting a dog to get me back on the straight and narrow. I asked my parents every day for two years if we could get a dog, and every day they said no. Eventually they got me a golden retriever and it changed my life. It gave me some responsibility: I fed it, walked it, cared for it. It was the best thing I've ever been given in my life. I didn't do brilliantly but I finished my studies, got my head down with the cricket, and got myself back on track.
K: The first time we played together for Ireland would be a massive one. It was in the European Championships in 2006, against Italy or Denmark I think. It was a nice moment for Mum and Dad to see us playing for our country together and it just highlighted how much we had put in. Every day of the week we used to go out after school, put up a pad in front of the wall, grab a tennis ball and bat, and play a "Test match". And here we were, playing for our country.
N: He played a similar innings against Kenya in 2007, when he got 142. People don't Kev enough credit for his shot selection - he's got huge hits in him but he doesn't just swing at every ball like an Afridi. So I knew he had the capability, it was just amazing that it happened on such a big occasion. I remember I got out for 29 - a horrific slog-sweep off Swanny - and I was sitting with Joycey, who'd just been out stumped, in the dressing room cursing our luck. We sat inside for half-an-hour and kept hearing people shout "Shot!" and then all of a sudden Kev had 30, then he had 40, 50… Some of the shots he was playing, putting Jimmy Anderson 20 rows back… and then Anderson and Prior trying to sledge him and Kev giving it back twice as good! It was just unbelievable. The type of innings you probably won't ever see again.
K: I wouldn't say poster-boy - they're usually quite attractive! I'm probably not as comfortable in the limelight as Nialler but I'll certainly take all the advantages that come with it. I suppose if you score a hundred in front of a million people then you've got to expect some kind of publicity to come your way.
K: It's not really my priority. I do like four-day cricket whenever I've played it for Ireland but it's not my favourite format and to be honest with you I probably wouldn't last a season in county cricket. It's a hard slog on the body being an allrounder and the type of player that I am, whether it's the first ball or 100th over of the game I'm still going to be giving 100%. I suppose it's unfortunate that in my own mind I wasn't up to first-class cricket but I thoroughly enjoy white-ball cricket and I want to play as much of that as I can. If I can play Test cricket on top of that in the years to come then I'll cherish those games as well.
K: Well it depends on when Nialler hangs up his boots!
"The Last Time We Saw Kevin" - read All Out Cricket's account of a tense and fascinating final meeting with Kevin Pietersen