Coventry Telegraph

Tim picked a winner after punt on career with Bears

- By BRIAN HALFORD

“I GUESS some of the best things in life aren’t planned,” says Tim Ambrose. He’s spot-on, of course.

And Ambrose’s great Warwickshi­re career, and indeed his whole life in English cricket, is a classic example.

Last month, after 14 years as a Bears linchpin behind the stumps and in the middle order, ‘ Amby’ called time on that career. It closed with a record 1,012 wicketkeep­ing dismissals for Warwickshi­re, 16,632 runs, winners’ medals in all formats and 11 Test appearance­s for England.

That career certainly transpired to be one of the best things in his life… and it most certainly wasn’t planned.

But, back in the late ’90s, a teenaged, trainee greenkeepe­r from rural New South Wales in Australia decided to take a punt on a trip to England… and the rest is Bears’ history.

“Aged 16 and 17 I was working on golf courses and landscapin­g and doing whatever I could get,” Ambrose recalls.

“I just thought it was time to get out of the little bit of a rut I was in and do something different.

“I’ve got a British passport through my English mum and some cousins down in Arundel, so I saved up some money and thought I’d go and see a bit of the world. A good way to fund that was to play some cricket as I was playing quite well in Australia.

“It was really just a way to fund a bit of a holiday but I sent a CV over to Hampshire and Sussex. Sussex’s chief exec at the time was Dave Gilbert from New South Wales so he recognised me and thought I was worth a look.

“The day after I landed in England I had a two-day trial at Hove. It rained the whole time and was pretty miserable and I didn’t really know what was going on.

“I remember rocking up and thinking ‘this is a pretty good club ground’ – I had no idea it was profession­al cricket, I hadn’t really looked into it.

“But they sent me down to Eastbourne and I played a season there and a few second-team games and they offered me a two-year deal.

“I guess some of the best things in life aren’t planned. You go wherever life takes you.

“I was a 17-year-old doing greenkeepi­ng and travelling to Sydney twice a week to play cricket and then someone says ‘ would you like to play cricket for a living and we’ll pay you to do it?’ That’s a pretty easy decision.”

The seeds of a legendary Warwickshi­re career had been sown, but first came five seasons at Sussex where Ambrose tasted championsh­ip glory but found himself competing for the ‘keeper’s spot with another emerging youngster, Matt Prior.

“I loved it at Sussex and we had some great times and won the championsh­ip in 2003,” he said. “But my contract was up at the end of 2005 and I hadn’t really progressed from ’03. I’d sort of stood still and become an easy drop and needed a change to get things back on track.

“Peter Moores was leaving as coach and, as much as he encouraged me to stay, he also knew that me and Matt couldn’t both keep wicket, so he was quite instrument­al in me deciding to take the plunge and challenge myself somewhere else.

“I spoke to Warwickshi­re and Lancashire and came to Edgbaston as 12th man for Sussex and spoke to Dennis Amiss and John Inverarity.

That was it really – when a club like Warwickshi­re came knocking, there was no way I was going to say no.

“It was a fantastic opportunit­y. They said ‘we want to offer you the opportunit­y to have a crack at playing for England, which we know you want to do, and that’s something the club prides itself on, producing England players’.

“Actually, it turned out to be a strange start because my move stemmed from a conversati­on with Dennis and John, and Nick Knight was captain.

Then I went to Cape Town for the winter and when I got back to the Bears, Mark Greatbatch was coach, Colin Povey was chief exec and Heath Streak was captain, so everything had changed!

“I remember sitting down with them in the New Forest pre-season and they said ‘we’re going to play you in the one-dayers but Tony Frost’s going to start in the four-dayers.’ I thought ‘well, that’s a bit different to what was in the brochure, but that’s the way it goes’ and I just threw myself into it. I was really fired up to move on again after a wasted couple of years at Sussex.

“It turned out that Frosty and I were both injured for the first game and Freddie Klokker played. I made my debut in the next game, at home to Yorkshire, and it was a fantastic game which we won in the third-last over. “Then I got a hundred in the next game and felt very at home. I really felt a part of it at the Bears very quickly.” Ambrose was on the path towards his ambition of playing for England and he accelerate­d along it thanks to the guidance of perhaps the best English wicketkeep­er never to play Test cricket.

“I was very fortunate that I got to work with Keith Piper,” he said.

“That winter I worked intensivel­y with Pipes and it made such a difference to my keeping but also a huge difference to my batting. It was amazing to work with someone I had idolised.

“When he talked about cricket, it just made so much sense. It was very simple, about getting the basics right, and it really clicked.

“My game developed so much thanks to Pipes.”

Amby also offers thanks to a man whose time at Edgbaston was less than happy, Greatbatch, director of cricket in 2006 and the double relegation season in 2007.

“Mark didn’t have the smoothest ride and things didn’t end brilliantl­y for him, but he backed me from very early on,” he said.

“He made me captain for the last three games of his second season, which certainly wasn’t on my radar, and he backed me and gave me a lot of confidence.”

Amby was establishe­d at Edgbaston and, as the Bears bounced straight back under Ashley Giles with championsh­ip promotion the following season, his name began to feature in the notebooks of England’s selectors.

When a club like Warwickshi­re came knocking, there was no way I was going to say no. It was a fantastic opportunit­y.

Tim Ambrose

 ??  ?? Keith Piper was idolised by Ambrose Tim Ambrose claimed a record number of dismissals for the Bears – and he was no slouch with the bat either!
Keith Piper was idolised by Ambrose Tim Ambrose claimed a record number of dismissals for the Bears – and he was no slouch with the bat either!
 ??  ?? Mark Greatbatch backed Ambrose
Mark Greatbatch backed Ambrose

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