Bridgetown homecoming set to mark T20I debut for batter who has already shone on league circuit

Matt Roller19-Jan-2022Some cricketers are overawed when they represent their country for the first time, but Phil Salt had spent so much time in the spotlight on the T20 circuit that his debut left him feeling almost underwhelmed.Six months ago, Salt was one of England’s five debutants in Cardiff after their first-choice ODI squad was decimated by a Covid outbreak. In front of a sparse crowd – limited by Wales’ stringent restrictions – the scratch side bowled Pakistan out for 141, before knocking the runs off with nine wickets in hand.Salt’s contribution was seven runs before he edged Shaheen Shah Afridi to slip, before watching Zak Crawley and Dawid Malan lead a cruise to victory. Driving back to his hotel room, he admitted on the phone to a friend that the occasion had not quite lived up to expectations.”I’ll be completely honest,” he says over Zoom from his new home in Salford. “After that first game in Cardiff, I sort of felt a bit underwhelmed by it all: we rolled them over, then we knocked them off with nine wickets in hand. It was an unbelievable performance but I remember saying: ‘surely that’s not it, international cricket?’Related

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“I’ve played in front of big crowds in franchise cricket – the New Year’s Eve game for the Strikers when it’s a full house at Adelaide Oval, and the crowd is – [but] in Wales at the time with the Covid regulations you couldn’t get any sort of numbers in… it sort of felt like playing a county game there.”The rest of the series lived up to expectation. In front of capacity crowds at Lord’s and Edgbaston, Salt held England together with 60 off 54 balls, then flayed 37 off 22 – including four fours off Shaheen’s first over – to get a successful pursuit of 332 off to a rocketing start. “Those two games felt like a big occasion,” he says. “Playing for England, at Lord’s – you hit a boundary and the crowd are right up with you. That was a hell of an experience.”Salt’s contribution to England’s 3-0 series win epitomised the ultra-attacking philosophy that England’s hierarchy have espoused since the 2015 World Cup, with his experience in franchise cricket – he had played 57 games in overseas T20 and T10 leagues before his England debut – helping to bridge the gap between domestic and international cricket.”He goes from ball one,” Luke Wright, Salt’s long-term opening partner at Sussex, says. “He’s so dangerous and scary for the opposition. He tries to hit the first ball for four pretty much every time, and often does. With Salty, you know if he’s hanging around, he’s not going to be chewing up many balls: he’s either going to be out or he’s going to smack it, and that’s exactly what you want in a T20 opener.