Financial Mail and Business Day

Punter lands windfall from 14-year-old bet

Rohith Nair

A punter who believed 14 years ago that Josh Tongue would one day play for England and placed a cheeky bet won £50,000 (R1.23m) when the fast bowler made his international debut against Ireland on Thursday.

Tim Piper had watched Tongue play when he was just an 11-year-old and placed a £100 bet at odds of 500-1 that he would play a Test match for England in the future.

“I’ve kept the bet slip in a cupboard all these years,” Piper told BBC Sport.

“I just thought to myself, ‘it must be worth £100’. If he doesn’t make it, he would make us proud anyway. This is just a bonus for him to get in the Test team,” he said.

Tongue, the son of Piper’s club teammate Phil, was a spinner at the time and the 56-yearold had seen enough to realise he was destined for great things.

“There was this little kid who bowled leg-spin, googlies and top-spinners. It was like Shane Warne,” Piper said.

Tongue, 25, switched to fast bowling when he moved to the Worcestershire academy and Piper said he kept an eye on the bowler who went on to pick up 162 wickets in first-class cricket.

Tongue had, however, contemplated retirement during a 15-month shoulder-injury layoff from 2021-2022 before two operations and Botox injections fixed the issue.

He earned his England callup for this week’s one-off Test against Ireland at Lord’s after injury concerns over fellow quicks James Anderson and Ollie Robinson.

“He had all those injuries, but I never gave up on him,” Piper added. “I kept thinking, ‘maybe it can happen’. These last two weeks have been a mad turnaround.”

SPORT

en-za

2023-06-02T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-06-02T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://bd.pressreader.com/article/281956022169971

Arena Holdings PTY