• Home
  • Other Sports
  • Colin Ingram Warms Glamorgan’S Hearts . . . But Frosty Is Aiming To Light The Fire For Welsh Talent

Colin Ingram Warms Glamorgan’s Hearts . . . But Frosty Is Aiming To Light The Fire For Welsh Talent

Glamorgan cricket ground Sophia Gardens Cardiff South Wales UK daffodil motif on entrance gates. Credit Jeff Morgan Alamy

Glamorgan cricket ground Sophia Gardens Cardiff South Wales UK daffodil motif on entrance gates. Credit Jeff Morgan Alamy

Not for the first time this season, Glamorgan have been indebted to their skills of South Africans Colin Ingram and Chris Cooke. Richard Thomas salutes their efforts but can’t help wishing they were the icing on the cake, rather than the main ingredients. I’m not one to scan social media forensically, but one tweet sprang out from my iPhone over the weekend – a brief, digital missive from former Glamorgan player Mark Frost, hailing the success of All Stars Cricket in Wales.

Not for the first time this season, Glamorgan have been indebted to their skills of South Africans Colin Ingram and Chris Cooke. Richard Thomas salutes their efforts but can’t help wishing they were the icing on the cake, rather than the main ingredients.

 

I’m not one to scan social media forensically, but one tweet sprang out from my iPhone over the weekend – a brief, digital missive from former Glamorgan player Mark Frost, hailing the success of All Stars Cricket in Wales.

 

Frosty, as he was known when he played for the Welsh county in the late 1980s and early 90s is now Community and Development Manager for Glamorgan and Cricket Wales. He devoted his 140 characters to hailing the success of the first weekend of the All Stars Cricket programme – an initiative from the ECB to get five to eight-year-olds into cricket.

 

“Over this weekend there has been a great sense of real excitement and joy as 1,600+ young people started on their journey in cricket in Wales,” wrote Frost.

 

This was rather poignant piece of social media, which had come quickly on the heels last week of Glamorgan announcing that the county had agreed one-year development deals with young Welsh duo, Connor Brown, an all-rounder from Caerphilly, and Jeremy Lawlor, a batsman from Cardiff.

 

I know there have been recent successes in developing some young Welsh talent – David Lloyd, Aneurin Donald and Andrew Salter to name but three – but maybe with the onset of All Stars and a successful development programme we will we be seeing a more consistent move to developing Welsh talent and not having to rely so heavily on a foreign legion.

 

It struck me early this week that Glamorgan’s valiant county championship draw against Nottinghamshire at Cardiff was masterminded by a couple of talented South Africans.

For all the world, it looked as though Division Two Nottinghamshire were about to seal a victory as easily manufactured as a raid by Robin Hood on the Sheriff of Nottingham’s coffers, when the young Boks – Colin Ingram and Chris Cooke – dug in.

The pair batted through the final day to amass a stand of 226 as the home side reached 420-5, 159 runs ahead of the visitors. Ingram’s marathon near 10-hour knock saw him reach a county-best 155 not out, while Cooke was unbeaten on 113.

All very honourable, but would it not have been all the more satisfying if the voices from Port Elizabeth and Cape Town had, instead, hailed from Port Talbot or Barry? Would Glamorgan not be in a healthier state for the long term if local talent was at the core of any success regularly on the cricket field?

It made me hanker for those days of Glamorgan’s glories in 1993 and 1997 – the Sunday League and County Championship title years respectively – when the backbone of the side was made up of the now long defunct Glamorgan Colts.

From the Colts came the likes of Hugh Morris, Steve James, Matthew Maynard, Tony Cottey, Adrian Dale, Robert Croft and Steve Watkin – a  magnificent seven who were developed and nurtured and came out the other side as proper cricketers.

There are those who will suggest – quite rightly – that Glamorgan did need some overseas help in ’93 and ’97, through Viv Richards and Waqar Younis. But at least 90 per cent of the side was Welsh back then.

We may have to wait for another decade for the All Stars programme to reap some consistent Welsh talent, but, hopefully, the wait will be worth it.

Related News

Rosie Eccles. Pic. Alamy

Rosie Eccles Ends Olympic Dream . . . But Will Fight for Wales at Commonwealth Games

Rosie Eccles has decided to step away from the GB Boxing World Class Programme and will not chase qualification for the 2028 Summer Olympics.

David Williams | Mar 06, 2026
Luke Littler (L) shakes the hand of Johnny Clayton (R). Pic. Alamy

Jonny Was Good . . . But Luke Littler was Something Special in Cardiff

The roar that greeted Jonny Clayton inside the Utilita Arena Cardiff suggested Welsh darts fans believed this might finally be his night.

Paul Jones | Mar 06, 2026
Jonny Clayton. Pic. Alamy

The Ferret and The Ice Man Hope to Bring a Welsh Duel to the Boil in Cardiff

Jonny Clayton admits he has no idea who the Cardiff crowd would side with if he and Gerwyn Price set up an all-Welsh final on Premier League night five.

Gareth James | Mar 05, 2026
Glamorgan Cricket. Pic. Alamy

Glamorgan Call off Oman Tour as Dan Cherry Outlines Safety Concerns

Glamorgan have abandoned their pre-season trip to Oman with chief executive Dan Cherry making it clear that events in the Middle East left the club with little alternative.

David Williams | Mar 05, 2026
Mark Williams. Pic. Alamy

Triple Blow as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page are Sent Packing from the Welsh Open

Welsh hopes at the 2026 Welsh Open were extinguished in a single evening as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page all crashed out on Thursday.

Gareth James | Feb 27, 2026
Mark Williams. Pic: Alamy

Mark Williams . . . Carrying The Flag for Wales Again With Help From Jak Jones and Jackson Page

Mark Williams is once again carrying Welsh hopes at the Welsh Open after producing a vintage display to reach the last 16 in Llandudno.

Gareth James | Feb 26, 2026