BATSMAN Tom Kohler-Cadmore wants to be chanting Worcestershire’s victory song regularly this summer.

The County club have their own anthem they sing together in the dressing room after victories.

And Kohler-Cadmore is determined to have some important knocks which will put his side into winning positions.

“The song is only sung after wins and it keeps everyone buzzing for longer,” said Kohler-Cadmore, 22.

“It’s a nice way to end a winning performance.

"Normally the names of the two key players from the match are mentioned in the song and it’s always great to sing it because everyone is happy.”

Kohler-Cadmore’s name was celebrated in the song after the County’s superb NatWest T20 Blast triumph against Durham Jets at New Road last May.

The destructive former Malvern College pupil cracked a remarkable 127 from just 54 balls to become Worcestershire’s highest individual scorer in T20 cricket.

“I knew I could do it and it was nice to be able to put it into a first-team performance,” he said.

“I’ve shown glimpses in previous years in the T20 when I would score 50, 60, or 70 and it was nice to get a really big score to win the game — and that’s something I want to do more of.”

Kohler-Cadmore was brought up through Yorkshire’s age-group team where he broke run-scoring records previously held by Michael Vaughan.

He graduated to the Worcestershire side as a teenager but failed to reach 20 in his opening eight first-class innings.

However, Kohler-Cadmore gradually began to find his feet and he has made significant progress.

“When you are scoring runs you have to make the most of it because you know there will be a bad spell around the corner,” he said.

“That lean spell could be a two or five-game run or longer so you have to keep churning out the runs.”