How Brendon McCullum lost England cricket Test head coach role


Bucket hats, nighthawks and all the golf. Some of England’s most incredible wins, achieved in breathtaking style. New Zealand at Trent Bridge, India at Edgbaston, Pakistan in Rawalpindi.

For a while, England were more than a cricket team. They were a feeling, a movement and a phenomenon. They flickered occasionally over McCullum’s next three years in charge, but nothing like that heady first year.

As to why the ride careered off the rails, McCullum gave us a clue on his very first day in the job.

“I don’t coach technically,” said McCullum at Lord’s in May 2022. “I understand the techniques, but for me it’s more around man-management and trying to provide the right environment for the team to go out and be the best versions of themselves.”

McCullum inherited an experienced group, players who had been flattened by a run of one win in 17 and stifled by Covid restrictions: Stokes, Anderson, Joe Root, Jonny Bairstow, Stuart Broad, Chris Woakes and Mark Wood.

The New Zealander liberated them, providing a freedom they knew how to use.

When the time came to build a new England team – given the age profile, this was always likely on McCullum’s watch – his style was not suited to moulding a new generation.

Jamie Smith, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir – even Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope. Their Test careers under McCullum started strongly. When they needed more, he could not provide it.

McCullum admitted to over-estimating the younger players’ preparedness for the hostility faced on and off the field during an Ashes tour. The outcome was a 4-1 loss so damaging that England cannot rid themselves of the stench.

At the end of that series, McCullum spoke in Sydney like a man who knew his time was up.

“I’m open to evolution and some nipping and tucking, but without being ultimately able to steer the ship maybe there is someone better,” he said.

He survived, along with Stokes and Key, albeit now with Bazball-lite: a curfew, restrictions on booze, a team chef and a beefed-up backroom staff. For a man who made no apologies for an “informal” environment, it did not feel very McCullum.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Week 17 Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Looking ahead at the second halfd

    The All-Star break is here, and it’s time to catch our breath. Grab some orange slices, drink some water, and make sure you’re rested and ready for the stretch run.…

    ‘The perfect football song’: Why England fans, players and David Beckham all love singing Wonderwall

    “Cmon England cmon Wonderwall.” That was the message once again from Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher on Sunday morning, after England’s travelling supporters – including former captain Sir David Beckham and…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Steam’s “no questions asked” refund policy makes it “super easy for players to abuse this rule”, says indie developer

    Steam’s “no questions asked” refund policy makes it “super easy for players to abuse this rule”, says indie developer

    7-Eleven Owner Drops Go-It-Alone Strategy for SoftBank Embrace

    Carney says U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham was steadfast defender of democracy and freedom

    Carney says U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham was steadfast defender of democracy and freedom

    Week 17 Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Looking ahead at the second halfd

    Week 17 Fantasy Baseball Waiver Wire: Looking ahead at the second halfd

    Weekend Box Office: ‘Moana’ Tops the Chart

    Weekend Box Office: ‘Moana’ Tops the Chart

    Sen. Tim Scott remembers Lindsey Graham’s role in “building bridges,” including with Trump

    Sen. Tim Scott remembers Lindsey Graham’s role in “building bridges,” including with Trump