The Ashes: England v Australia - youngsters who could play in upcoming series - 6 minutes read




With a thrilling Ashes contest over, the eyes of fans suddenly deprived of their fix of England-Australia action are already drifting to the next series when Ben Stokes' side will try to win back the urn.

In two-and-a-half years' time both sides could be very different, with England's bowling attack this summer - nicknamed Dad's Army - their oldest in 95 years.

BBC Sport has picked out some young players that could feature in the 2025-26 series down under and, if not then, the next time Australia are in England in 2027.

James Rew Rew equalled Dan Lawrence's record for most centuries in the County Championship by a teenager

Age: 19 Role: Wicketkeeper-batter

James Rew is the name on everyone's lips.

The left-hander has already scored six County Championship centuries, equalling the record for most tons by a teenager in the competition.

He has scored five this year, including a brilliant 221 having come in at 41-4, and is the leading run-scorer in Division One so far in 2023 - as well as being Somerset's regular wicketkeeper.

Rew scored 95 in England's defeat by India in the 2022 Under-19 World Cup final, when he played alongside Rehan Ahmed.

Former England captain Alastair Cook: "Rew is a phenomenal player with the statistics he's delivered.

"He doesn't fit the Ben Stokes mould of taking the game on. He is what you'd call a classical batsman. But he probably has more shots than he's shown."

Jack Carson

Age: 22 Role: Off-spinner

Sussex's Jack Carson is a bowler fancied by many in the know.

The tall off-spinner spent time around the England camp bowling under the eye of the coaches during the Ashes series.

He has taken 87 wickets in 32 first-class matches and impressed with the England Lions in Sri Lanka last winter - returning four-wicket hauls in both unofficial Tests.

Left-armer Jack Leach will only be 34 by the time of the next Ashes and 36 by the time the series returns to England in 2027, so he should be in contention with the younger generation for a while yet.

Did you know? Carson took a wicket with his second ball in a first-class match and has dismissed Joe Root in county cricket.

Gus Atkinson Atkinson is playing for Oval Invincibles in The Hundred

Age: 25 Role: Pace bowler

Gus Atkinson is another starting to be tipped for the top.

The seamer bowls at a lively pace across all formats for Surrey but has especially caught the eye with 20 wickets in five matches in the Championship.

He can count former England captain Cook as a fan, having dismissed the Essex opener this season.

Josh Tongue, who took five wickets in the second Ashes Test, Durham pair Matthew Potts and Brydon Carse, plus Lancashire's Saqib Mahmood - if he can enjoy a consistent spell of fitness - are also likely to be in contention come the winter of 2025.

Jofra Archer will be 30 by the start of the next Ashes while Ollie Robinson will turn 32 during that series down under.

Cook: "What surprised me about him is that you look at him bowl and feel there is a lot more in the tank.

"He doesn't look like he uses that much effort to get the ball down at a decent lick. Speaking to him, it looks easy but he is striving for as much pace as he can get. It looks like there is a bit more untapped pace."

Jamie Smith Smith scored a century on his first-class debut against a Marylebone Cricket Club side captained by Stuart Broad

Age: 23 Role: Wicketkeeper-batter

Jamie Smith has been highly rated for a while yet is still only 23.

Earlier this year he scored a 71-ball hundred for the Lions in Sri Lanka - the fastest century in the history of England's development side.

Able to score quickly but with a solid technique, he looks made for 'Bazball'.

The right-hander is a regular for reigning champions Surrey and has scored eight centuries in 48 matches, including 234 against Gloucestershire last year.

TMS commentator Daniel Norcross: "Jamie Smith is a nailed-on certainty to be playing cricket for England in four years."

Rehan Ahmed Ahmed has already played one Test, one one-day international and two T20s for England

Age: 18 Role: Leg-spinner

Leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed is an 18-year-old already known to many England fans. Last year he took 5-48 on his Test debut as he helped England to a series victory in Pakistan.

When Moeen Ali injured his finger in the first Ashes Test, Ahmed was called up as cover, although England ultimately opted to go into the second Test at Lord's without a spinner.

Life for spinners is difficult in English county cricket, even more so for a 'leggie', and Ahmed has only taken six wickets in eight matches this season.

Still, with opportunities expected worldwide in white-ball cricket in the coming years, Ahmed is expected to have a big future.

Did you know? Ahmed is the youngest man to play for England in Tests, one-day internationals and T20s.

What about Australia?

Australia are known for their production line of fast bowlers and the next could be Western Australia's Lance Morris.

The 25-year-old is regarded as the quickest bowler down under and could have featured in this year's Ashes but for a back injury.

There is also hope 26-year-old Jhye Richardson, who took five wickets against England in Adelaide during the 2021-22 Ashes, can overcome his injury issues and, although not as quick as Morris, Jordan Buckingham, 23, took a six-wicket haul for Australia A in New Zealand this year.

Morris is nicknamed 'The Wild Thing' - a name also given to former Australia fast bowler Shaun Tait

There are big hopes for 19-year-old top-order batter Teague Wyllie, who was named in the team of the tournament at the 2022 Under-19 World Cup and is already part of WA's Sheffield Shield-winning side.

Another Western Australian, Aaron Hardie, 24, is a seam-bowling all-rounder averaging 43 with the bat and 29 with the ball.

Finally, keep an eye out for left-armer Spencer Johnson. He is 27 but has been making an impression of late, leading to comparisons with his namesake Mitchell. Johnson is playing in The Hundred this year for Oval Invincibles.



Source: BBC News

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