Rehan traces up Trent Bridge closing after ‘particular’ hometown recreation for England
He was inundated with requests for his 4 complimentary tickets, estimating that he had seen “150” family and friends within the stands at Trent Bridge. And he impressed with each bat and ball, hitting 11 off 7 earlier than taking 2 for 27 from his 4 overs.
“It was a special feeling,” Rehan stated. “Obviously playing abroad is great but playing in front of my home crowd is a different feeling. To be fair, in Pakistan we got a couple of big roars as well but when you are playing at home, especially in Nottingham – I know a lot of people here and am from here – it’s special.”
He bowled in tandem with Adil Rashid via the center overs, and admitted that he used to dream of taking part in alongside his fellow legspinner. “Him and Mo [Moeen Ali] are people we look up to as an Asian community,” Rehan stated. “Everyone in England looks up to them, so to play with them is a special feeling.
“We speak about bowling fairly a bit. He [Rashid] might be 5 instances the bowler I’m: he has 4 totally different legspinners, he is performed a very long time, has loads of expertise. He was younger, performed and it did not go effectively for him; then he got here again, and have become one of the best bowler. He’s been via loads.”
Rehan is not part of England’s ODI squad to play New Zealand and is due to link back up with Leicestershire later this week. He is available for their four-day fixture against Sussex which starts on Sunday, as they bid for promotion to Division One of the County Championship.
He will then join up with England again for a three-match ODI series against Ireland, starting on September 20 at Headingley, but hopes to be involved two days before in the Metro Bank One-Day Cup final.
“I’ve not thought far forward,” Rehan said. “I’ll hopefully play some four-day cricket subsequent week, attempt to get some overs in. I’d wish to [play in the final] if I’m free and get picked. The boys are smacking it with out me so I do not know in the event that they want me…”
His 15-year-old brother Farhan has been playing for England Under-19s in a one-day series against Australia this week, and was in the stands at Trent Bridge on Tuesday. “I’ve been watching,” Rehan said. “They acquired smacked 4-1: that by no means occurred to us once we have been Under-19s.”
Rehan himself only turned 19 last month; he missed England’s training session on Monday to take his driving test, with permission from head coach Matthew Mott. He passed “first time, no minors” and said: “It was the Bank Holiday Monday morning in Nottingham, so there was no-one on the highway.”