Townsville Bulletin

RESOLVE SER VES BANGERS WELL

- BEN HORNE

LONG before he flew to Brisbane to make his Test debut, Cameron Bancroft made the same journey on a wing and a prayer. Not picked for an Australian under19s developmen­t squad, the never- saydie teenager from Perth asked the coach if he could just turn up anyway. Bancroft stayed on his aunt Anita’s couch and caught the bus to the national performanc­e centre every day, willing to do whatever it took to one day play Test cricket for Australia. When he was presented a faux baggy green on his first Australia A tour in 2015, he was so proud he wore it out in Chennai that night. Tomorrow, Bancroft will trade it in for a real one when he strolls out to the Gabba, testament to arguably the hardest- working and driven cricketer in the country. The man who refused to turn Bancroft away, Australian developmen­t coach Troy Cooley, knew instantly that there was something special about the kid who wouldn’t take no for an answer. “He is single- minded, a bit like a dog on a bone. He’s pretty ferocious around what he wants,” Cooley said. “He didn’t get one of the under 19s spots we had in the national performanc­e program that year, but I can remember him giving me a bloody call and saying, ‘ G’day, Truck, it’s Bangers here. Listen, my aunty lives in Brisbane and it’s no good in WA weatherwis­e in the winter, but would you mind if I came up for a few weeks and just trained? I won’t bother, I’ll just stay two or three weeks’.

“I said, ‘ Bangers, no problem’. How can you say no to that?”

Bancroft’s reputation precedes him as the man with the insatiable work ethic.

Short leg is the fielding position in cricket that no one enjoys, so Bancroft made it his mission to turn himself into the best short leg fielder in the world and thrive on the dirty work.

For a couple of years, key figures in Australian cricket had no doubt Bancroft ticked every box. The only problem was he wasn’t scoring runs.

By his own admission, Bancroft struggled to deal with being named to debut on the 2015 tour of Bangladesh, only to have that campaign cancelled due to terrorism threats, and he then slipped down the queue and out of contention.

Bancroft said he just lost the mental battle with himself.

“I wanted it so badly and I wasn’t patient enough,” Bancroft said.

“It took me a little while just to sit back and kind of go, ‘ this is where I want to go, I’ve just got to trust it and no matter when that happens or if that happens, I’ve just got to stay relaxed and enjoy’.

“( The difference this year) is the fact I didn’t really think that I’d be here.

“I just went out and tried to make runs for WA. By doing that I was playing for something bigger than the personal success that I’d certainly dwelled on and worried about in the past.”

Bancroft went to sleep on his aunt’s coach dreaming of a baggy green, and now it’s his.

 ??  ?? PROUD OCCASION: Cameron Bancroft will make his Test debut for Australia at the Gabba tomorrow.
PROUD OCCASION: Cameron Bancroft will make his Test debut for Australia at the Gabba tomorrow.
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 ?? Ex- Test bowler Graeme Swann. ??
Ex- Test bowler Graeme Swann.

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