Sunday Express

POPE HAILS HIS HEROES

- By Jim Holden

OLLIE POPE is the blazing young talent of English cricket, and a sportsman whose first inspiratio­n was the sight of an Olympic gold medal. The Surrey batsman scored a brilliant maiden Test century in the winter series victory against South Africa, but was denied the chance to build on that success when the recent scheduled tour of Sri Lanka was abandoned due to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Instead, while trying to keep up his fitness with gym work and running in the Surrey lanes, he has had time to reflect on his progress in sport.and to pay tribute to two mentors who have helped him along the way.

The first was Steve Batchelor, one of the 1988 GB hockey side that memorably captured a gold medal at the Seoul Olympics. He was Pope’s hockey coach at school, and also the father of the player’s girlfriend at the time.

“I spent a fair bit of time with him back in those schooldays, and he would share good sports stories and how it was back then,” says the 22-year-old Pope. “He talked about what it was like when he won that gold medal, which was pretty cool. He showed it to me, and of course that’s an inspiratio­n to a youngster.

“There was also a memento of winning the Sports Personalit­y team of the year award. I wasn’t that good at hockey, but it would be nice to get one of those myself one day in cricket.”

Pope was always destined to be a cricketer, and is a product of the outstandin­g Surrey academy that has also sent Sam Curran, Dominic Sibley, Rory Burns and Ben Foakes into the England Test side.

“I remember on my Test debut, it was Sam’s third game,” says Pope. “I was at fine leg, he was at deep square leg.we had a full crowd at Lord’s, we had India nine wickets down in that second innings, and we looked at each and smiled and looked around. It was a special moment to share with someone I’d been playing with since I was 14 years old. Making memories with Sam and the other guys is surreal.”

The second mentor for Pope is his boss at Surrey, their director of cricket Alec Stewart, the former England star. “He’s a massive influence, and he is more than just a boss to so many of us,” says Pope.

“Before the trip to New Zealand I went into his office for 45 minutes and we just chatted about how to cope if it goes really well or if it goes badly.

“He gave me the confidence to succeed. He really trusts my ability, which I take as a massive compliment. Stewy presented my cap to me on debut, and he did a phenomenal speech with that. He is one of the those guys that when he speaks, you listen.”

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