Fifteen-year-old Caoimhe Bray embraces 'super cool' comparisons with Ellyse Perry

Comparisons in sport are inevitable. Sometimes, for emerging players, they aren’t helpful. Being compared to Ellyse Perry would seem to be up there with the most daunting of prospects. Yet 15-year-old allrounder Caoimhe Bray, who put in a starring performance when she became the youngest WBBL player in history on Sunday for Sydney Sixers, is embracing it.”No, I love it,” she said prior to her debut where she claimed Deandra Dottin’s wicket and hit the winning runs. “Ellyse Perry’s definitely been a role model of mine since I was very, very young. I think if you ask all my primary school friends, every school project was about her, that’s for sure. I don’t think it’s anything like scary or overwhelming being compared to her because she’s such a great person and I just love that people are even saying it.”I feel like there can’t be too much pressure coming from it…I just try to do the best I can and I mean, being compared to Ellyse Perry is obviously super cool but in the end, I still am my own person and I just try to do what I can.”Four years ago, Bray was getting selfies with the Australian team at the T20 World Cup. “I think that day Ellyse actually got out for a golden duck and I remember mum telling me that I was crying in the stands when that happened.”Now, on Sunday at Adelaide Oval, Perry handed Bray her cap – “I was crying a little bit, maybe more than a little bit,” she told afterwards – and was stood next her as she prepared to bowl her first over. Her first ball was pulled for six by Dottin, the second was edged and should have been caught by Sarah Bryce and third was bludgeoned down the ground. But Bray responded by closing out the over with a perfect yorker into the base of middle stump.