But as the three-match series heads to Headingley, where the second Test starts tomorrow, it is a reminder the former fast bowler was in a West Indies side beaten inside two days by England at the Leeds ground 17 years ago.
In 2000, the teams started the fourth Test of a five- match series at Yorkshire's headquarters all square at 1-1.
Whereas England victories over the men from the Caribbean have now become commonplace -- 2000 was the last time the West Indies won a Test on English soil -- it was a very different story at the turn of the century.
If the team of 17 years ago was not as menacing as the one that inflicted successive 'blackwashes' on England in the mid-1980s, it still had players of the calibre of Ambrose, fellow fast bowler Courtney Walsh and star batsman Brian Lara.
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And yet England managed to produce the first two-day Test win by any side for 54 years -- and England's first since hammering South Africa at Old Trafford in 1912.
Yorkshire all-rounder Craig White took his maiden Test 'five for' in West Indies' first innings 172.
- Hard Test cricket -
County colleague Michael Vaughan, the future England captain, made his then Test-best score of 76 in a reply of 272.
England were indebted to another Yorkshireman in Darren Gough for sparking a slump that saw the West Indies bowled out for just 61 in 26.2 overs -- a second-innings slide that makes last week's twin collapses in Birmingham look almost tame by comparison.
Andrew Caddick rounded things off with a remarkable spell of five for five in 15 balls, including four wickets in an over, after the Somerset paceman was switched to the Football Stand End (as both fans of Yorkshire and the adjoining Leeds rugby football league club have long called it).
Ridley Jacobs was lbw to the first ball before Caddick shattered the stumps of Nixon McLean, Ambrose and Reon King in four legitimate deliveries.
Much has changed in the intervening 17 years -- for example the players and press at Headingley have moved from the Football Stand to the Carnegie Pavilion -- barely a glint in an architect's eye in 2000 -- at the opposite Kirkstall Lane End.
And yet the post-match comments of West Indies captain Jimmy Adams, now their director of cricket, could, rather worryingly, just as easily have come from current coach Stuart Law.
"We have the fellows who can do the job," said senior batsman Adams.
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