Philip Dean Salt (born 28 August 1996) is a Welsh professional cricketer who plays internationally for England and domestically for Lancashire County Cricket Club, and previously for Sussex. Primarily an aggressive right-handed opening batter,[3] he sometimes keeps wicket and, less frequently, bowls right-arm off spin.[4] Salt made his international debut for England in July 2021. Born in Wales, he moved in his youth to Barbados and then to England. Salt was part of the England team that won the 2022 ICC T20 World Cup. He made history after scoring two consecutive centuries in T20Is against West Indies.
Early life
Salt was born on 28 August 1996 in Bodelwyddan, Wales. He began playing cricket in St Asaph and played for the North East Wales Under-11s.[5] He attended school in Chester,[5] and when he was 10 years old his family moved to Barbados. As a result, he met the Barbados residency requirement, and so was eligible to play for either England or the West Indies.[6] Whilst in Barbados he played with future Sussex and England colleague Jofra Archer.[7] Salt returned to the United Kingdom at the age of 15, when he attended the Reed's School on a cricket scholarship.[8][7]
Salt was retained by Sussex for the 2015 season,[14] and scored 72 from 52 balls in a May 2015 Sussex Premier League match against Cuckfield Cricket Club.[15] He also represented Brighton and Hove, and top-scoring for them with 39 in a match against Middleton.[16] In June 2015, he scored 43 in a Sussex second XI match against Surrey, in a Sussex team including Mahela Jayawardene and Ashar Zaidi.[17] Salt made his List A debut in a 2015 Royal London One-Day Cup match against Essex; he was the 29th different player to play for Sussex in the 2015 Royal London One-Day Cup. Opening the batting, Salt scored 22 from 20 balls; the match was eventually a no result due to rain.[18][19]
In July 2021, having previously trained with the squad earlier in the summer,[30] Salt was named in England's ODI squad for their series against Pakistan,[31] after the original squad for the tour was forced to withdraw following positive tests for COVID-19.[32] Salt made his ODI debut on 8 July 2021, for England against Pakistan.[33] In December 2021, Salt was named in England's Twenty20 International (T20I) squad for their series against the West Indies.[34] He made his T20I debut on 26 January 2022, for England against the West Indies.[35]
In June 2022, in the opening match against the Netherlands, Salt scored his first century in ODI cricket, with 122 runs.[36] During the match, England scored 498 runs, the highest score in ODI and List-A history, with Salt being one of three centurions alongside Dawid Malan and Jos Buttler.[37]
On 13 November 2022, Salt won the 2022 T20 World Cup with England. He made two appearances at the tournament, playing in both the semi-final and final of the competition.[4]
Salt was named in both the ODI and T20 squads for England's 2023-24 tour of the West Indies.[38] In the third T20I of the series, he hit his maiden T20 international century, becoming the fifth England men's batter to do so.[39] In the fourth T20I, he made another century, and in the process achieved several notable feats.[40] His score of 119 was the highest score by an England men's player in a T20 international. Salt also became the first England men's batter to hit two centuries in international T20 cricket, and only the third men's batter to hit back-to-back international T20 centuries.[41]
Salt was named in the squad for the 2024 T20 World Cup.[42][43]
In the tournament against West Indies, he smashed an unbeaten 87 off 47 balls, his innings included seven fours and five sixes. He completely decimated the West Indies' bowling attack by smashing 30 runs in the 16th over bowled by Romario Shepherd.