Kent assistant coach Matt Walker has spoken to KSN about his excitement for working with Kent’s talented crop of youngsters in his new role.
Walker rejoined the club last week, having spent the majority of his 19-year playing career at Canterbury, and began work at The Spitfire Ground, St Lawrence earlier this week.
Speaking to KSN shortly before starting work at the club, Walker spoke of his excitement at getting to work with some of the younger members of Kent’s first team squad.
“I think that’s probably what excites me most about coaching, actually”, Walker explained. “I enjoy working with senior, experienced players – at Essex I was very lucky to work with Alastair [Cook] and Gautham Gambhir and Hashim Amla, and all these guys who are very experienced, very good players. But what excites me most is the youngsters and progressing and developing them into the players that we all know they can be.”
With finances relatively tight at Kent over the last few seasons, Walker also understands how important the club’s Academy and younger players can be.
“Historically, they [Kent] have had a good talent pipeline and the Academy has worked pretty well. I think they’re a bit like Essex really – they’re not a club that is going to be shelling out fortunes from other counties or overseas players or Kolpack players, so it is important that that talent is nurtured and developed in the right way.
“I think that is the challenge – obviously the immediate challenge – is to kick those guys on and hopefully help them become the players that they want to be and that we want them to be. The potential is there, it’s obvious for everyone to see, but to turn them into consistent, year-in year-out first team achievers for Kent, and match-winners and ultimately trophy-winners for Kent – that’s the most important thing.”
Kent have a rich history of having a number of home-grown players in the team, who grew up and learned their trade in the county.
“When I played at Kent it was a team, pretty much for the most part of my career, that was made up of Kent [born] players and around the country it was a similar sort of way – home-grown players dominated County teams”, Walker said.
“The game has changed a bit now – player movement is obviously much rifer than it used to be. But, at the moment at Kent, you’ve got the likes of Bell-Drummond, Billings, Blake, Northeast, Ivan Thomas – young, home-grown players – guys that can become very, very good first team players for a number of years, and can make the spine of that Kent team now and that excites me – to see Kent players being in the Kent team and performing. That’s what I enjoy doing most and that’s what I think is going to be the immediate challenge, definitely.”