Ed Pollock is faster than Andre Russell but how far can he go?

He has the top strike rate in the game but needs to play “smarter” if he is to fulfil England predictions

Matt Roller22-May-2020If you were asked to close your eyes and picture the fastest-scoring batsman in T20 cricket, you’d probably think of a Jamaican with a mohawk, bulging biceps and shiny gold helmet rather than a slight, 5ft 10in Englishman with a side parting and an economics degree. But incongruous as it might seem, it is Ed Pollock who holds the record for the highest career strike rate in the 20-over game, his 174.93 pipping Andre Russell’s 171.29 in a photo finish.A 24-year-old left-hander hardly known outside of the West Midlands, Pollock has played only 29 games in his T20 career, but his top-order pyrotechnics in a Birmingham Bears shirt have earned him notoriety in the North Group of the Vitality Blast as a star in the making. And yet, despite his eye-catching strike rate, he is yet to earn a franchise gig overseas, or even to pull on an England badge as part of an age-group or Lions team. With his average the wrong side of 25, you could be forgiven for thinking that he is something of a one-hit wonder.Pollock, you might assume, is the sort of player who has emerged as a natural result of the introduction of the Twenty20 Cup in 2003 – the first professional T20 competition in the world, hailed as an immediate success for attracting fans to county cricket. Tom Banton, the Somerset starlet and former team-mate of Pollock’s at Worcestershire club Barnt Green, cites watching Neil Carter as a pinch-hitter for Warwickshire as his earliest cricketing memory. That players of his and Pollock’s generation are such clean hitters surely relates to the fact they have grown up with the shortest format?ALSO READ: How our readers voted in the greatest T20 player bracketNot quite. “You see it talked about, how guys my age have grown up playing T20, but I think it was only in my last year at school that I started playing it as I do now – taking advantage of the powerplay, that sort of thing,” Pollock says. “Growing up, I was quite small, and I was very much a blocker until the age of 15 or 16. At that stage I realised I could start hitting sixes, and I think I got a bit carried away with it from there.”More than a T20 baby, Pollock is part of the generation of English players raised on the 2005 Ashes. After playing primarily as an offspinner who batted at number seven or eight in Worcestershire’s academy, he was released soon after his 18th birthday, at which point he was thought he “nowhere near good enough to be a professional cricketer”.