The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Strauss warns Root tour will be biggest challenge of career

England captain must deal with Ashes ‘bubble’ Selectors still unsure of best XI for first Test

- By Nick Hoult

Andrew Strauss has warned Joe Root that captaining England in Australia this winter will be the greatest challenge of his career.

Strauss is one of only three men to have led England to Ashes wins in England and Australia and, as the team’s director of cricket, he is an invaluable source of informatio­n for Root, who also has the ideas and experience of Michael Vaughan to tap into.

With an Australian coach as well in Trevor Bayliss, Root is not short of good advice, but Strauss knows from his own successful campaign in 2010-11 that nothing prepares you for the life of being an England captain in Australia.

“It’s the biggest challenge an England captain will ever have. There’s all sorts of reasons for that. A lot of them are off-field,” said Strauss. “You are living in this incredible bubble for a long period of time, everything is directed towards you as England captain in terms of being responsibl­e for what’s happening on the pitch. But also the conditions in Australia are very changeable from one venue to another, to different periods in the game and you need to be able to adapt to those conditions you see in front of you.

“That is why winning was my greatest moment as an England captain, and Joe will be incredibly motivated to do that early in his captaincy career. He’s got a great chance, he’s started brilliantl­y. He’s shown he’s very much his own man, he’s got his own way of thinking about the game and that will stand him in very good stead in Australia.”

Strauss will join the England selection panel next week to pick the Ashes squad and admits there are concerns over the consistenc­y of the side, particular­ly among the batsmen. Those problems have to be settled in the three warm-up games before the first Test in Brisbane, where many England Ashes campaigns have been sunk. Strauss made a three-ball duck in the first innings there seven years ago, but a hundred in the second as England drew the game to set them up for the series win. On the last tour, Mitchell Johnson’s destructio­n of Jonathan Trott set a very different tone. “There are two or three places up for grabs, which is never ideal and our consistenc­y hasn’t been what we want – the two are probably pretty closely linked really, aren’t they? There are going to be opportunit­ies for guys to make a very strong case for a long-term England career based on performing well when it really counts in Australia, but I’d be lying if I said we were going with absolute clarity on what our best XI is.

“The reality is there are two teams with really strong assets and some vulnerabil­ities. Our challenge is to start the tour well. If we hit the ground running and the guys who have not played a lot of Test cricket get an early score, then I think we are in a great position to win.”

England announce their bowling coach next week, with a consultant to be appointed for the Ashes. The Daily Telegraph revealed last week that Shane Bond was England’s No1 choice to work with the team in Australia. Strauss said a permanent replacemen­t for Ottis Gibson would be chosen next year.

Strauss was speaking at Trent Bridge, where England play West Indies today in the second Royal London one-day internatio­nal, having won the first at Old Trafford by seven wickets. This series is a chance to restore confidence after the disappoint­ing Champions Tro- phy semi-final defeat by Pakistan.

“The Champions Trophy was a missed opportunit­y because the confidence from winning a global event is massive. Pakistan outplayed us and there are lessons for us to learn about knockout cricket and you have to enter those games in the right frame of mind.”

Strauss defended the England selectors, Mick Newell and Angus Fraser, from accusation­s of conflict of interest suggested by Sir Ian Botham this week after Durham lost their all-rounder Paul Coughlin to Notts. Newell is director of cricket at Trent Bridge.

“He’s 100 per cent wrong if he’s implying that he’s gone there on the back of one of our selectors saying he’s got a better chance of playing for England coming to my county.

“I believe that if players move from one county to another, they are thinking about their chances of playing and how playing for that team might further their chances of playing cricket for England.”

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