RAVI Bopara was on Monday night named Young Cricketer of the Year at an awards ceremony in London.
Bopara, 23, has had an eventful few months, having made his Test debut for England in Sri Lanka last December.
He also recorded Essex's first double hundred in one-day cricket and only the eighth in history in a Friends Provident Trophy quarter-final victory over Leicestershire at Grace Road.
That unbeaten 201 ensured that Bopara's name was firmly back in the frame for England in all forms of the game and he was indeed recalled to the Test squad when Michael Vaughan quit the captaincy last month.
Bopara, who was edged out in the voting last year by Yorkshire leg-spinner Adil Rashid, has won three Test caps and appeared in 28 one-day internationals.
In addition to his outstanding limited-overs performances for FPT winners Essex, who also won the NatWest Pro40 Division Two title and appeared in Twenty20 finals day, Bopara has scored 1,046 runs and taken 25 wickets in 11 first-class matches this summer.
Other candidates for the prestigious award, voted for by members of the Cricket Writers' Club and presented at the annual dinner, included Bopara's England colleague Stuart Broad, winner in 2006, Kent opener Joe Denly and Liam Dawson, of Hampshire.
Winners have to be England qualified and under the age of 23 on May 1 of the season in question.
Bopara, who was presented with his award by 2007 winner Rashid, said: "Hopefully this can be the start of bigger things for me, away on tour with England this winter.
"I had a look at the list of previous winners and there are some very big stars who have won this award, so it is a big honour."
© Press Association 2008
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article