Brydon Alexander Carse (born 31 July 1995) is an English cricketer who plays for Durham and England. Primarily a right-arm fast bowler, he also bats right handed. Born in South Africa, he is the son of Zimbabwean cricketer James Alexander Carse, who played in England for Northamptonshire.
Carse generates genuine pace and regularly clocks speeds around 90mph(145kph).[1] He made his international debut for the England cricket team in July 2021.
Domestic career
Carse signed a development contract with Durham in 2016, and made his first-class debut in that year's County Championship.[2] He picked up 17 wickets on his debut season for Durham and he was rewarded with a two-year deal by the club.[3] He was ruled out of the 2018 County Championship due to a knee injury.[4] In September 2018, he was offered a three-year contract by Durham.
On 31 May 2024, Carse was given a 16-month ban (of which 13 months were suspended) for breaches of ECB betting regulations, having been found to have placed 303 bets on cricket matches between 2017 and 2019.[7][8] Most of the offences took place when he was watching games on television at home whilst suffering from two long-term injuries, and involved small amounts of money.[9]
International career
Carse is qualified to play in English county cricket due to his British ancestry,[10] and completed his England residency qualification in 2019. He was named in England's ODI squad for their series against Pakistan in July 2021,[11] after the original squad for the tour was forced to withdraw following positive tests for COVID-19.[12] Carse made his ODI debut on 8 July 2021, for England against Pakistan.[13] On 13 July 2021, in the third ODI against Pakistan, Carse took his maiden five-wicket haul in ODIs.[14][15][16]
In May 2022, Carse was named in England's 14 man ODI squad against the Netherlands. In the 2nd ODI Carse impressed with his raw pace, clocking speeds up to 91mph/146kph.[17]
He made his T20 debut against New Zealand on the 30 August 2023, having been called up as a replacement for the injured Josh Tongue, and won man of the match by taking 3-23.[18]
He was also called up on 23 October 2023 as a replacement for the injured Reece Topley during the 2023 ODI World Cup. [19]
On 7 October 2024, Carse made his Test debut in the first Test against Pakistan at Multan.[20] The following day, he dismissed Naseem Shah to take his maiden Test wicket,[21] and finished the match with figures of 4/140 (from 38 overs).[22]