England’s Willey glad he made IPL ‘no-brainer’ move

The English seamer insists the IPL has helped him learn “a lot from a tactical, mental and skill point of view.”

Published : Jun 15, 2018 11:11 IST

David Willy of England insists that it is the Indian Premier League which helps him boost his performance.
David Willy of England insists that it is the Indian Premier League which helps him boost his performance.
lightbox-info

David Willy of England insists that it is the Indian Premier League which helps him boost his performance.

England all-rounder David Willey has insisted playing in this year’s edition of the Indian Premier League was a “no-brainer” even if it put his county contract with Yorkshire at risk.

The 28-year-old is adamant he’s a better player for the experience of working under Chennai Super Kings coach and former New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming, even though his stint with the IPL champions amounted to just three games.

Now Willey, the son of the ex-Test batsman and former international umpire Peter Willey, is looking to put that experience to good use by helping England win their first World Cup title when they stage the 2019 showpiece tournament.

Read: Smriti Mandhana to feature in Kia Super League

A call to go to Chennai as an injury replacement came at the start of the English season and meant a miss of several weeks of Yorkshire’s county campaign.

When asked if it had been a difficult decision Willey replied: “It was a no-brainer. You don’t get the chance to go and play in the biggest Twenty20 competition in the world every day. I was threatened with them ripping my contract up — which wasn’t great — but that has all been resolved now.”

'Student of the game'

Willey, however, said playing in the IPL had seen him learn “a lot from a tactical, mental and skill point of view” in a career that has so far yielded 36 One-Day International (ODI) appearances and 20 in Twenty20 internationals (T20Is) for England.

“I found my love for the game again while I was out there, and I really do think I’ve become a student of the game again,” he added. “I’ve signed another year at Yorkshire — which is going through today — and I still want to play all formats.”

England was certainly glad of Willey’s renewed desire as his ODI-best 35 not out batting at No. 8 saw it complete a nervy three-wicket win over world champion Australia at The Oval on Wednesday. However, the strength of England’s top order means a promotion is unlikely for Willey, whose main role in white-ball cricket is to take early wickets in his role as left-arm swing bowler.

He struck a blow early at The Oval to have Travis Head caught in the slips with an away-swinger and Willey said he had to be unafraid of conceding runs in the search for wickets. “I need to make sure I am swinging that new ball and taking wickets inside that Power Play,” he explained ahead of Saturday’s second ODI in Cardiff, where England will look to go 2-0 up in a five-match series.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment