Star turn on Lions debut leaves England feeling the need for Will Smeed

Somerset batter set for List A bow on Thursday after 90 off 56 in Tuesday’s warm-up

Matt Roller13-Jul-2022It is not often that a player makes their List A debut for their country’s ‘A’ team, but Will Smeed is no ordinary cricketer. After belting 90 off 56 balls for England Lions against the touring South Africans in Taunton on Tuesday in a warm-up game, Smeed will make his official 50-over debut at New Road on Thursday, still three months away from his 21st birthday.Smeed’s career to date has been a microcosm of the modern English game: he has not made a first-class or List A appearance but has played 46 T20s, including a season for Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred. Uniquely among English players, he has played in the Pakistan Super League and the Abu Dhabi T10, but not the County Championship.Not that he has necessarily designed it that way. “It’s just the way it’s happened,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “By no means does it reflect my aspirations: I still want to play everything. It just so happens that I haven’t really scored too many runs in the second team, so that’s not going to get me in the first team. I’m not sure averaging 12 is going to get me picked.Aged 16, he made a red-ball hundred for the seconds in the same innings as Marcus Trescothick, but has struggled for runs this season. “It’s all about trying to figure out what my best method is and that’s something that’s improved quicker in white-ball cricket through the opportunities I’ve had.”The reality is that I haven’t scored enough runs. Here [at Somerset] especially, if you deserve a chance, you get it. Hopefully that’s something that kicks on soon because I’m desperate to be a part of that squad.” Perhaps he is ideally suited to the Bazball revolution. “Maybe in my next red-ball game, I might just try and slog it and see what happens,” he said, laughing.Smeed flashes through the covers•Getty ImagesMost of Smeed’s development has fitted the conventional path for a young English player: excellent coaching at an independent boarding school, impressive performances at the Bunbury festival, graduation from a county’s academy then elevation to the professional set-up. But for a shoulder injury and the pandemic, he would have played significantly more than his three games for England Under-19s.But there has always been a slight difference with Smeed, a sense that he is part of a new, distinctive generation. When asked as a 17-year-old to make a hypothetical choice between the Ashes, the World Cup and the IPL, he opted for the last option with a cheeky grin. He is built like a rugby union centre rather than a batter, with forearms that are more Joe Calzaghe than Joe Root.The result is a white-ball batter with a prolific early-career record, averaging 30.54 in T20 cricket with a strike rate of 143.99. Smeed generates remarkable power, memorably clearing Taunton’s retirement flats in Somerset’s Blast quarter-final against Lancashire last season.