Rod Lyall
28 September 2006
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Seventeen-year-old Dutch international batsman Alexei Kervezee has signed with Worcestershire on a two-year contract, the County has announced.
Kervezee will start at Worcestershire’s Academy next year, after the World Cup. He’s fully committed until then, taking part in the ICC Winter Training Camp at Pretoria, the Dutch side’s visit to South Africa in November-December and the World Cricket League in Nairobi before the World Cup begins.
At New Road he will benefit from the attention of Worcestershire’s coaching staff, under the leadership of Director of Coaching Steve Rhodes and Academy Director Damian D’Oliveira, both former stalwarts for the county. Other coaches include batting specialist Gordon Lord, former county captain Ben Smith, and bowling coaches Ian Pont (who also works with the Dutch national squad) and Phil Newport.
Like the other academies in England and elsewhere, Worcestershire places a good deal of emphasis on the broader aspects of professional development, including fitness, nutrition, and career management.
Kervezee has experienced a meteoric rise since making his Hoofdklasse debut at the age of fifteen in 2005. He finished twelfth in the national averages that season, making 580 runs at 41.43, and immediately found himself in the Dutch side, where he hit 46 not out in an Intercontinental Cup match against Ireland.
His 2006 season in the Hoofdklasse was a little less remarkable, with 339 runs at 28.25, but his temperament made a great impression when he scored 47 on his ODI debut against Sri Lanka in July, and he hit a magnificent 152 against Scotland in the European Under-19 Championship.
Although he was not often called on to bowl for HBS this year, he took 16 wickets at an average of 12.75 with his medium pacers, and he could develop into a useful change allrounder.
Worcestershire Chief Executive Mark Newton was evidently delighted with the county’s new signing.
‘Alexei came over to trial with the club,’ he said, announcing the arrangement, ‘and I went to Amsterdam recently to meet with him and his family. We have agreed that he will spend the next two seasons with us where he will benefit from being part of the professional squad.
‘Dare we say that there are recollections of a young Graeme Hick in this arrangement!’
Compact and technically mature beyond his years, as a batsman Kervezee shares with many of his compatriots a tendency to get himself out with loose strokes. The coaches at Worcestershire will undoubtedly be keen to tighten up his technique – he certainly has the ability to succeed in cricket at the highest level.
source: cricketeurope4.net