Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Participate in discussion with your fellow Zimbabwe cricket fans!
zimfan1
Posts: 7151
Joined: Tue Aug 05, 2008 1:45 pm
Supports: MidWest Rhinos
Location: Wales

Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by zimfan1 »

Both have now finished school in the UK, what are their plans?

Byrom seems to be in the fringes of the Somerset side but Wekch does not seem to be making much of an impression at all.

Any updates from our insiders?

zimbofan88
Posts: 202
Joined: Fri Aug 21, 2015 3:58 pm

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by zimbofan88 »

Both the boys have almost passed their teens, it makes me wonder if they are really that talented as we think. At their age, Gary Ballance was already playing for full strength Yorkshire, and he was one of their key players.

rupeni
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2016 1:55 am
Supports: MidWest Rhinos

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by rupeni »

zimbofan88 wrote:Both the boys have almost passed their teens, it makes me wonder if they are really that talented as we think. At their age, Gary Ballance was already playing for full strength Yorkshire, and he was one of their key players.
Welch is as talented if not more than Ballance.. This is a boy, who at 15, scored 40s/50s against Vitori, Chatara and co.. Ballance had Uncle Dave Houghton to map the road for him and remove any obstacles.. Welch is better.. The kid was playing First Class/List A in Form 3!!!! it's unheard off, ever, in Zim

User avatar
eugene
Posts: 7892
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 11:31 pm
Supports: Matabeleland Tuskers

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by eugene »

Get them in the team! They are wasting their time in England.
Neil Johnson, Alistair Campbell, Murray Goodwin, Andy Flower (w), Grant Flower, Dave Houghton, Guy Whittall, Heath Streak (c), Andy Blignaut, Ray Price, Eddo Brandes

ZIMDOGGY
Posts: 7210
Joined: Sun Feb 28, 2010 11:40 pm
Supports: MidWest Rhinos

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by ZIMDOGGY »

They are wasting time in pomland.
They ARE talented, but England doesnt bring out their best attributes.

In my opinion, they could almost be on 6 figure salaries in the country they know and love by now.

I think its the environment and coaching.
It can bring out the best and the worst in a player.
The same principle applies in other sports as well.

Remember;
Servine,Flower and especially Blignaut were epic fails in the Aussie domestic scene after the walkout, all were good players.
Taylor and Elton have been mild dissapointments in England. Someone like Ballance however grew amazingly in England in a way he never did in Zim.

I think growing up playing cricket a certain way in a certain area in a certain culture on certain pitches makes the player you are. You are familiar to what you know.

Zimbabwean batters seem to be classically trained in a quiet cricket atmosphere with bouncy type of pitches. I also *assume* they thrive better in a close knit cricketing community where everyone knows everyone, as is the case in Zim.

Some players perform better in their hometowns around the world, and as we all know, every country seems to struggle in overseas conditions.
If you look at Zimbabwe and England as countries, one is relatively laidback, warm, outdoorsy.

The other is cold,wet,bustling and frantic.

I think all these issues are all the symptoms of the same tree.

I am just speculating however. By no means am i saying this as gospel truth.
Cricinfo profile of the 'James Bond' of cricket:

FULL NAME: Angus James Mackay
BORN: 13 June 1967, Harare
KNOWN AS: Gus Mackay

'The' Gus Mackay.

Hero.
Sportsman.
Artist.
Player.

**
Q. VUSI SIBANDA, WHERE DO YOU HOP?

A. UNDA DA ENTERTAINMENT CENTRE*

TapsC
Posts: 2349
Joined: Wed Dec 30, 2015 2:54 am

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by TapsC »

They all chase a dream in the UK but most of them won't make it.. had Welch stayed I'm pretty sure he would have made his debut by now.. The one mistake I think they made was not playing for Zim in the u19 world cup..that would have given them the right exposure and their talents would have been there for all to see. the Matigimu bowler people always talk about learns in SA but still played and was given a chance to shine.

User avatar
CrimsonAvenger
Posts: 9859
Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2007 2:57 am
Supports: Mountaineers
Location: India

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by CrimsonAvenger »

ZIMDOGGY wrote:They are wasting time in pomland.
They ARE talented, but England doesnt bring out their best attributes.
...
I think growing up playing cricket a certain way in a certain area in a certain culture on certain pitches makes the player you are. You are familiar to what you know.

Zimbabwean batters seem to be classically trained in a quiet cricket atmosphere with bouncy type of pitches. I also *assume* they thrive better in a close knit cricketing community where everyone knows everyone, as is the case in Zim.

Some players perform better in their hometowns around the world, and as we all know, every country seems to struggle in overseas conditions.
If you look at Zimbabwe and England as countries, one is relatively laidback, warm, outdoorsy.

The other is cold,wet,bustling and frantic.

I think all these issues are all the symptoms of the same tree.
Precisely the kind of reasons Ray Price gave when he came back from his Worcs stint to rejoin Zim, almost shockingly. And needless to say, he went on to become World no. 2 bowler in ODIs in his second coming.

This definitely plays a big role.

STONEMAN
Posts: 113
Joined: Fri Aug 12, 2016 3:15 pm
Supports: Mashonaland Eagles

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by STONEMAN »

ZIMDOGGY wrote:They are wasting time in pomland.
They ARE talented, but England doesnt bring out their best attributes.

In my opinion, they could almost be on 6 figure salaries in the country they know and love by now.

I think its the environment and coaching.
It can bring out the best and the worst in a player.
The same principle applies in other sports as well.

Remember;
Servine,Flower and especially Blignaut were epic fails in the Aussie domestic scene after the walkout, all were good players.
Taylor and Elton have been mild dissapointments in England. Someone like Ballance however grew amazingly in England in a way he never did in Zim.

I think growing up playing cricket a certain way in a certain area in a certain culture on certain pitches makes the player you are. You are familiar to what you know.

Zimbabwean batters seem to be classically trained in a quiet cricket atmosphere with bouncy type of pitches. I also *assume* they thrive better in a close knit cricketing community where everyone knows everyone, as is the case in Zim.

Some players perform better in their hometowns around the world, and as we all know, every country seems to struggle in overseas conditions.
If you look at Zimbabwe and England as countries, one is relatively laidback, warm, outdoorsy.

The other is cold,wet,bustling and frantic.

I think all these issues are all the symptoms of the same tree.

I am just speculating however. By no means am i saying this as gospel truth.


GARY BALLANCE WAS TOP SCORER FOR RHINOS IN 2011-12 LOGAN CUP, BUT THE SELECTORS DOESNT GAVE HIM CHANCE DUE TO THAT RUBBISH QUOTA & RACIAL SYSTEM.


WELCH & BYROM SHOULDN'T COME BACK TO ZIM AGAIN, OTHERWISE THEY HAVE TO WARM IN THE BENCH BEING DEPRIVED OF RACIAL QUOTAS AND CARRY WATER FOR THOSE USELESS SENIORS LIKE THE UNDER 19 PLAYERS DO IN ZIMBABWE.

WE MIGHT SEE TALENTED SNYDER, IVES, SLY, MURRAY, KEFEE IN UK....

ZIMBABWE WILL LOOSE MORE TALENTS IN FUTURE AS YOUNG CRICKETERS HAVE NO FUTURE IN ZIMBABWE

aydee
Posts: 2704
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2008 5:15 pm

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by aydee »

STONEMAN wrote:

GARY BALLANCE WAS TOP SCORER FOR RHINOS IN 2011-12 LOGAN CUP, BUT THE SELECTORS DOESNT GAVE HIM CHANCE DUE TO THAT RUBBISH QUOTA & RACIAL SYSTEM.
Definitely not true. He was already an established county player by then, and on England's radar. He wasn't about to throw that away.

Googly
Posts: 19084
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2013 5:48 pm

Re: Nick Welch and Eddie Byrom

Post by Googly »

This may well be a fairly accurate, albeit too brief, breakdown of his early career.
http://www.ecb.co.uk/stats/player-profi ... y-ballance

Post Reply