England’s Brydon Carse pleased by ‘full backing’ on return from cricket ban

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Brydon Carse has expressed his thanks to the “incredibly supportive” England setup after his rapid reintegration following his ban and hopes to repay the faith shown in him, first in the remaining one-day internationals against Australia and then in the Test series in Pakistan that follows immediately.

Carse had a mixed day at Headingley on Saturday as England made it two defeats from two in their ODI series. He dismissed Travis Head and truncated Australia’s innings with two wickets in two balls, yet was spatchcocked for 75 runs. However, for Carse the only way is up.

At the end of May, he was banned for three months for a historical breach of betting rules – a 16-month sentence, 13 of them suspended for two years. He was allowed to train, returned at the end of August, played a couple of games for Durham and was immediately called up by England for both the white-ball squads to face Australia and the Test series against Pakistan.

Carse is grateful for the opportunity he has been given. “The last three weeks have been very pleasing for me to be back playing. All I’ve had from everyone is full backing and full support and I’m just looking forward to playing as much cricket in an England shirt going forward.”

That includes the potential of a first Test cap during England’s three-Test tour of Pakistan. “I’m very excited to be going to Pakistan,” he said. “That’s a group of players that I have wanted to be involved with for a number of years now with a few setbacks here and there.”

Carse, alongside Gus Atkinson, Olly Stone and the 20-yearold 6ft 7in rookie Josh Hull, will make up a formidable speed quartet, full of potential if lacking experience, alongside the steadier Chris Woakes, Matthew Potts and Ben Stokes. “I watched the last series in Pakistan … the mantra that they [England] are trying to play their Test cricket is probably shifting and trying to play a couple of bowlers that can bowl with extra pace. My role is going to be short, sharp bursts, trying to bowl quickly and get the ball to reverse.

“If these guys can all stay fit and perform, there’s a really good crop of fast bowlers that England can pick from and I think it’s healthy for competition.”

There will not be much time to adjust between the end of the ODI series at an autumnal Bristol next Sunday, and landing in Pakistan three days later. “I’m making sure I bowl enough overs in training to keep my loads up,” Carse said. “But the way the schedule is now I’m fully focused on white ball and [with] all of these different formats happening at the same time, the adjustment that you’ve gotta do from a white ball to a red ball will be done in Pakistan when I land on 2 October.”

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Before that, three more ODIs, with this inexperienced England side on a huge learning curve against the world champions. “There’s no hiding the fact that a lot of the players in that group don’t play a lot of 50-over cricket and that’s just the structure around English cricket now at the moment with the Hundred. It’s just about adapting to the certain situations quicker.” The next test comes around quickly, in Durham on Tuesday.

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