The Herald (South Africa)

Despite the accent, I feel English – Jennings

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Keaton Jennings was born and bred in South Africa and had captained the Proteas Under-19s but insisted yesterday ahead of his expected England debut that he felt very English.

The 24-year-old opener is tipped to make his internatio­nal bow for his adopted country in England’s do-or-die fourth test against India, which starts at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai tomorrow.

The tall left-hander was a late call-up for England’s two remaining must-win matches after Haseeb Hameed injured his hand during the third test and was ruled out of the rest of the series.

Jennings said joining up with his new teammates had been surreal, but that he would relish the opportunit­y to open the batting with captain Alastair Cook, if picked.

“I’m feeling very comfortabl­e and very English, despite my accent,” he joked at a media conference yesterday following a training session in India’s financial capital.

Jennings, whose mother is British, was born in Johannesbu­rg and went on to captain South Africa at under-19 level.

But after leaving school, he moved to England in 2011, committing himself to four years there so he could become eligible to play for the national side.

“The opportunit­y, the profession­alism, I don’t know if I can put my exact finger on it, but there was a combinatio­n of feeling really welcome, feeling loved, feeling pushed as well,” he said of his decision to make himself available for England, instead of South Africa.

His impressive scoring for Durham had captured the attention of England’s selectors and Jennings, who owns a house in the northeast English town, said he felt settled in his new life.

“I suppose the more time you spend in the country, the more you feel local,” he said.

“I’m blessed that they’ve welcomed me here with open arms.”

England trail 2-0 in the five-match series and anything less than a victory tomorrow, would see India seal the rubber. Jennings, however, welcomes the pressure. “I have always been taught that pressure is a privilege. It’s the sort of thing my dad tried to infuse into me as a kid,” Jennings, whose father, Ray, starred for South Africa during the apartheid era, said.

“I like to think I bring positive energy and a smile to the group. I am generally quite a happy guy. “We’re 2-0 down and it’s a tough position. “Hopefully, we can throw a few jibes and throw some punches back,” he said.

I’m blessed that they’ve welcomed me here with open arms

 ??  ?? KEATON JENNINGS
KEATON JENNINGS

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