Teenage wicketkeeper-batter Thomas Rew has extended his contract with Somerset until 2028. The 18-year-old has already made a significant impact in English cricket, including captaining the Under-19s to a World Cup final.
Teenage wicketkeeper-batter Thomas Rew has signed a new contract with Somerset until the end of the 2028 season.
The 18-year-old penned his first professional deal with the county in July last year which was due to run until October 2027, after making his debut in the T20 Blast.
Rew and older brother James, 21 - who has established himself in Somerset's first XI - are among England cricket's brightest young talents.
He captained England's Under-19s as they reached a World Cup final in February and also toured Australia with England Lions.
"Opportunities such as those with the England U19s and the England Lions have arrived pretty fast for me in the last 12 months and events have happened in my cricketing journey so far that I wasn't necessarily expecting," Rew said in a statement.
"I'm grateful to Somerset for all the opportunities they have given me so far. I just try to take one match at a time and not look too far ahead, an approach which really helped me last year."
Rew joined Somerset's youth set-up as an under-11 and has progressed to make 13 senior appearances - two in the T20 Blast, 10 in the One-Day Cup and his County Championship debut in their most recent outing against Yorkshire, which ended in defeat.
Thomas Rew's new contract with Somerset extends until the end of the 2028 season.
Thomas Rew captained England's Under-19s to a World Cup final and toured Australia with England Lions.
Thomas Rew's brother, James, is 21 years old and has established himself in Somerset's first XI.

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Head coach Jason Kerr said it was "easy to forget how young" Rew is.
"Thomas has an innate ability to be incredibly competitive and read situations effectively," he said.
"There's a maturity in his cricket that not everybody has and that's combined with ability and talent.
"It's going to be really exciting to see how he develops but I think it's important that we're patient."