PCA: Rookie Camp returns to Edgbaston

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Professional Cricketers Association
Professional Cricketers Association
The Professional Cricketers' Association (PCA), founded in 1967 by former England fast bowler Fred Rumsey as the Cricketers' Association, represents past and present first-class cricketers in England and Wales. In the 1970s, the PCA established a standard employment contract and minimum wage for professional cricketers. It also helped create a pension scheme in 1995 and launched the magazine All Out Cricket and the ACE UK Educational Programme in 2002.

Photo Credit: Professional Cricketers’ Association

Young cricketers meet for induction into professional game.

A group of the country’s brightest young cricketers met for an induction into the professional game at Edgbaston on Tuesday, at the first in-person Rookie Camp for two years.

After the pandemic moved the annual PCA event online last year, the 2022 edition, which was supported by the Tom Maynard Trust for a tenth year in a row, saw 57 rookies from across 16 first-class counties and five regional centres in attendance in Birmingham. That’s the highest number for a non-virtual Rookie Camp and only two fewer than the 2021 figure.

Guest speakers including England’s Sam Curran, Thunder star Phoebe Graham and 2021 PCA Futures Awards winner Abi Sakande gave the players a taste of all aspects of what it’s like to be a professional cricketer during a series of workshops throughout the day.

There were Q+A sessions on playing in inclusive environments and the changing landscape of cricket, as well as further presentations on the new PCA eLearning platform, launched on Tuesday, and personal development away from the game delivered by current players Joe Cooke, Oliver Hannon-Dalby and Andrew Salter.

Players were also introduced to the PCA’s registered charity, the Professional Cricketers’ Trust, and received wellbeing and welfare sessions from sports mental health charity Sporting Chance and gambling harm awareness consultancy EPIC Risk Management before heading home.

Rookie Camp forms part of the PCA’s Personal Development and Welfare Programme (PDWP), a personalised support service which aims to enable individuals to develop sustainable performance both within and outside of cricket.

The annual event brings together players who have recently signed their first professional contract at one of the 18 first-class counties or eight regional centres, and sits alongside further PDWP initiatives including the Futures Awards and Futures Conference.

“It’s the start of all of our journeys, so it’s been really nice to be around the other rookies and to learn about all these things as part of a collective.”

ALICE CAPSEY, SOUTH EAST STARS

2021 cinch PCA Women’s Young Player of the Year and South East Stars player Alice Capsey said: “It’s been great to learn from all the different experiences that the speakers here today have had, whether it’s around inclusivity, gender equality, or anything else. We’ve been able to take a little bit from each session which has been really beneficial.

“It’s the start of all of our journeys, so it’s been really nice to be around the other rookies and to learn about all these things as part of a collective. In the future, I want to make the most of the opportunities that I’ve been given, so today has been all about learning how I can engage with the PCA further down the line.”

Sussex’s Dan Ibrahim said: “Today has helped us to broaden our minds to consider aspects of being a professional cricketer which we might not have thought about before coming here today.

“Working with the PCA helps us to build for the future, but I’ve learned today that they can also really help us in the present. There’s always someone to talk to who can provide you with the support that you need, and it gives you that sense of security that there’s always someone there if you ever need it.”

England’s Sam Curran said: “The guys at Rookie Camp are not much younger than me, so it’s great to speak to them about my experiences with the PCA and what they can expect during the coming years.

“I’m excited for them, because I can put myself in their shoes a few years back and that was a very exciting time for me personally. The PCA does so much for the game, so these events are so important in providing that pillar of support that helps you both on the pitch and away from it.

PCA Chief Executive Rob Lynch said: “It’s of paramount importance that we help our latest intake of professional cricketers to understand what the PCA can offer them and the support that is available. To see a record attendance for an in-person Rookie Camp can only motivate us to provide the best possible support.

“A huge thank you to both the rookies for giving up their time to come here today, and to the numerous contributors including many PCA members and PCA staff. In addition, we wouldn’t be able to provide our services without the ongoing support of our commercial partners, so I’d like to thank those who attended today to talk to the rookies.”

Thank you to the following PCA members for presenting at Rookie Camp 2022: Joe Cooke, Sam Curran, Phoebe Graham, Miles Hammond, Oliver Hannon-Dalby, Abi Sakande, Andrew Salter.

Full list of players in attendance: Ami Campbell (Central Sparks); Jonny Bushnell, Harry Crawshaw, Luke Doneathy, Oliver Gibson, Tom Mackintosh (Durham); Jamal Richards (Essex); Andrew Gorvin, Tegid Phillips (Glamorgan); Luke Charlesworth, Will Naish, Ben Wells (Gloucestershire); Toby Albert, Harry Petrie, Tom Prest (Hampshire); Tawanda Muyeye, Jaskaran Singh (Kent); George Bell (Lancashire); Toby Greatwood, Max Harris, Ishaan Kaushal (Middlesex); Harry Gouldstone, Freddie Heldreich, Gus Miller (Northamptonshire); Bess Heath, Sterre Kalis, Katie Levick, Rachel Slater (Northern Diamonds); James Hayes, Calvin Harrison, Sammy King, Matt Montgomery (Nottinghamshire); Sonny Baker (Somerset); Alice Capsey, Dani Gregory (South East Stars); Grace Scrivens (Sunrisers); Nathan Barnwell, Ben Geddes, Tom Lawes (Surrey); Jamie Atkins, Oliver Carter, Jack Carson, Henry Crocombe, Tom Hinley, Sean Hunt, Dan Ibrahim, Ali Orr, Harrison Ward (Sussex); Laura Jackson (Thunder); Chris Benjamin, Jacob Bethell (Warwickshire); Josh Baker, Jacques Banton, Taylor Cornall, Ben Gibbon (Worcestershire); Will Luxton, Harry Sullivan (Yorkshire).

Find out more about the PCA’s Personal Development and Welfare Programme.

Name of Author: Professional Cricketers Association

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