Coventry Telegraph

Alastair is impressed by relaxed approach of captain Joe

- By DAVID CLOUGH covsport@trinitymir­ror.com

FORMER Test captain Alastair Cook hopes to keep churning out the hundreds for England in a side led with a “glint in his eye” by his successor Joe Root.

There was something perhaps approachin­g a tone of relief as Cook assessed his return, after his own record-breaking tenure, to what he unquestion­ably does best of all – scoring Test match runs for England.

Following a heartening debut victory over South Africa for the new captain at Lord’s, Cook continues to be confident he and Root will work successful­ly together - and that the Yorkshirem­an will not have to radically change the chirpy personalit­y so notable since his emergence as an internatio­nal batsman.

“I still think you’ll see the glint in his eye,” Cook said in a sponsor’s interview before the second Investec Test match at Trent Bridge.

“There will be moments when he’ll still play that (cheeky) role at certain stages.

“With a bit of responsibi­lity for those actions, you might think twice about doing it. But he still has that glint and smile in his eye, so I don’t see it changing.”

After shedding those leadership duties, Cook produced a crucial second-innings half-century as England opened the series with a 211-run win – with the help too of Root’s 190 first time round.

“(As captain), you’re thinking ‘what will I do here if you win the toss?’ – but (now) you don’t actually have to worry about the consequenc­es,” he added.

“Those decisions you constantly have to make, getting judged on them all the time eventually can take its toll on you.

“So you certainly feel a bit more relaxed around the camp.”

His switch back to the ranks, since his resignatio­n in February, has had a liberating effect.

“Naturally without having to make all the decisions, you are going to feel a bit freer.

“It’s been an interestin­g seven months, a rollercoas­ter of emotions – certainly in January and February.

“It will be the same for Rooty, unfortunat­ely (one day) – once you’re England captain, you’re always going to be a former England captain.”

Cook has had to come to terms with that, but appears content.

“I understand why people want to talk about it, because it is interestin­g to see the new captain and the old captain still in the side,” he said. “But I hope my personalit­y and relationsh­ip with Joe (means) we shouldn’t have any problems. “As he feels more comfortabl­e in the role, and I feel more comfortabl­e, I will maybe throw a few more suggestion­s in.” Root has not made what Cook believes might have been an understand­able mistake, to spell out his mission statement in a grand dressing-room speech.

“After those months of knowing he was going to be captain, (you might think) he’d come in and say ‘you’ve got to do this, got to do that’ - and I reckon that’s probably the worst thing you can do,” the 32-year-old said.

“By playing it a bit more low-key, his message will grow and get clearer and stronger as he goes.

“You often see a captain who comes in and thinks he’s got to do this at the start of his reign, this is what he wants ... and you’ve forgotten everything he said after two minutes.

“Because he didn’t do that, everybody was still waiting for it - and when he does speak, he’s very clear and precise in what he wants to do.”

By playing it a bit more low-key, his (Root’s) message will grow and get clearer and stronger as he goes Alastair Cook

 ??  ?? Joe Root has the players’ full respect, says Alastair Cook, right
Joe Root has the players’ full respect, says Alastair Cook, right

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