At the age of just 18 years and 21 days, Ashtead CC
opener and still-schoolboy Dominic Sibley has broken all sorts of records on
his way to an unbeaten 220 on a remarkable day at the KIA Oval.
Starting the morning unbeaten on 81, after Surrey’s
highest opening partnership of the season between him and Rory Burns (82)
yesterday, Sibley, understandably nervous, took almost 100 minutes of the opening
session to register the 19 runs he needed to become Surrey’s youngest ever
centurion in First Class cricket. But when the moment finally happened, a full
toss from former England spinner Adil Rashid in which he swept to the deep
backward square boundary, emotions of the highest order exploded out of the
young man’s body as he realised what he had done.
What is most impressive though is that not once did he
lose concentration, or if he did he did well to hide it, immediately focussing
back on his job by hitting Rashid for another boundary the ball after he went
to his ton. He was batting at the time with the world’s number 1 Test and ODI
batsmen Hashim Amla after nightwatchman Tim Linley had been dismissed, which is
a distant dream of most 18 year old’s who aspire to play First Class cricket.
Amla was determined to catch Sibley up, with the pair putting on 236 for the 3rd
wicket; a record against Yorkshire. Despite Sibley being on 85 when the South
African walked to the crease, he only just managed to reach his 150 before his
partner, who did it remarkably quicker than the 18 year old. It was Amla’s
first century for Surrey after previously recording 4 half centuries, and he
raced to 150 off just 151 balls compared to Sibley’s 394.
Amla fell for 151 and because of Sibley he will hardly
get a look in in tomorrow’s press, but don’t underestimate the impact he most
likely had on Sibley’s innings today. Sibley remained at the same tempo as he
had done for the previous day and a half, determined to make a double hundred,
whilst Vikram Solanki played as fluent as ever. He blasted 51 off 54 balls with
3 sixes, before he was caught on the fence looking to pass 1000 Championship
runs in the season with a six, meaning he fell just 5 runs short of the feat.
Sibley kept going and moved more fluently than he had
done earlier in the day to reach his 100 and when he danced down the track to
Kane Williamson and hit him through the leg side for 4 when on 199, he created
all sorts of records for himself. He has become the youngest batsmen to hit a
double century in the County Championship since its inception in 1890. He is
the second youngest batsmen to hit a double century in First Class cricket in
England after the little known WG Grace. And he is also the 13th
youngest batsmen in the history of the game to hit a double century in First
Class cricket.
Just let those records sink in for a moment. Records for
a boy who was only playing because Whitgift School gave him permission to miss
four days of his A-Levels. Imagine when he goes back and all his mates ask him,
“Dom, why were you not here this week?” and he can give them the answer that anyone
would dream of. But no doubt they will all know of his wonderful achievement,
as it has quite rightly been plastered all over media outlets across the web
and most likely tomorrow’s newspapers.
I first became aware of Sibley when he was just 15, as he
hit a double hundred for Ashtead in the Surrey Premier League against bowlers
such as Jimmy Ormond. It was obvious he had an incredible talent, and he hit
yet another double hundred for the Surrey academy last year, showing that when
he bats big, he certainly bats big!
He played for the England Under 19’s earlier this year,
hitting a century in one of the games, but a deep cut in his leg suffered on
his YB40 debut kept him out of the Under 19 games against Pakistan this summer
that he surely would have played in. He only made his First Class debut a
couple of weeks ago, just after he turned 18, scoring 12 and 10 against
Somerset before registering a duck at Edgbaston last week.
No one would have seen an innings of this magnitude
coming so soon and with Surrey 572-4, a lead of 138, he will most likely try
and add to his 220* tomorrow morning and try and add to the 9 hours and 41
minutes that he has spent at the crease.
All that is left to say is, Dom Sibley: remember the name.