The Sunday Guardian

Trevor Bayliss instils growing belief into England

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Had Trevor Bayliss been appointed to lead the England football team, it would be common knowledge by now that a mere four years ago he was forced to embark on a career as an estate agent after Australian cricket offered no work for him. And that his uncomplica­ted methods include such little time for modern excesses of data that he was the only candidate not to make a PowerPoint presentati­on when later interviewe­d for a job by New South Wales.

Nobody knows whether the bespectacl­ed Bayliss reads Stefan Zweig novellas like Roy Hodgson, and other pointless details which belong to the Football Associatio­n hothouse, yet Bayliss is the man who occupies a vastly more significan­t place on the national sporting landscape than those who have been filling football’s breathless­ly empty summer weeks. He will be happy with that.

To have observed the England players’ warm-ups on the sunny outfield these past three days – Bayliss in the background, under his sun hat on the outfield, perusing from a distance and leaving the squad to their business – has provided a vivid measure of his calm, unobtrusiv­e ways. “The coaches have had their time; had their chance of playing the game,” he said in a rare and revealing interview with Sky’s Ian Ward, broadcast on Wednesday. “These players are the custodians of the game now and they must have their say.”

The players are giving thanks for that after months of Peter Moores on their shoulders, carrying clipboards. Yet it is Bayliss who has seized upon the wisdom of his assistant Paul Farbrace, who suggested earlier this summer that England might succeed in a new, bolder form of self-expression on the cricket field.

The significan­ce of Farbrace’s contributi­on to the spirit of new England should not be underestim­ated, yet it was Bayliss you gave thanks for it yesterday when the defining third innings of the Test match began to deliver something beautiful: a self-assurance among these England players that they could take a 122- run lead into a second innings, become destabilis­ed at 22 for 2 and still know that they could attack Australia. Not even the loss of three wickets for nine runs as the skies clouded over an hour before the close could take that away.

Adam Lyth’s 37 will only ever be a footnote to this summer and he should have known better than to reach into the bowler’s footmarks for Nathan Lyon’s drifted ball which brought his day to an end. Yet the 28 runs he collected off 13 balls on the way offered some of the most emphatic evidence yet that the attitude of the new England belongs to the Ashes, too. Ian Bell delivered the spirit of the age in his 89-ball 60, too, emblematic­ally living and dying by the sword as he found his off stump knocked back immediatel­y after smashing a drive over extra cover for four. But Bayliss has helped effect aggression in other ways too. Encouragin­g Moeen Ali to vary his pace in the full knowledge that Australia would try to attack him (“He is quite big on me mixing my pace and bowling variations,” Ali said of Bayliss, having collecting Michael Clarke and Steve Smith’s wickets on Thursday). Suggesting the line of attack that made a mockery of the No 1 billing assigned to Smith, whom Bayliss developed in Sydney.

It is an ice-cold aggression that this 52-year-old wants, though, because the characteri­stic they all relate about him at New South Wales is his equanimity. “He remains level at all times,” said one. For his own part, Bayliss will claim that the cricket England play is driven by pragmatism, drawing on the personnel available, rather his own philosophi­es. “A lot of [the [philosophy] will be brought by the type of player [Alastair Cook] has got underneath him and how they actually play,” Bayliss told Ward. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ?? AP/PTI ?? Moeen Ali plays a shot in Ashes 2015.
AP/PTI Moeen Ali plays a shot in Ashes 2015.
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