Daily Mail

England blessed that Key chose McCullum in his sliding doors moment

- PAUL NEWMAN’S WEEKLY COLUMN

IT WAS, said Jonathan agnew on Test Match Special, a ‘lightbulb moment’. He was talking about the time he first heard Brendon McCullum’s name linked with the England test coaching job and it perfectly described my reaction, too.

Of course it made sense. the New Zealander was clearly the perfect man to come together with Ben stokes and change the whole mentality of the England team. the only surprise was that none of us other than Rob Key had thought of it.

How different things could have been had Key — who has been a breath of fresh air since swapping commentary for administra­tion — gone with Gary Kirsten, the man considered the hot favourite for the job earlier this year.

so confident was the south african that he had got the gig, he started rearrangin­g his life and interests in Cape town to make sure he was ready to make the move to England.

Instead he had to make do with remaining coach of welsh Fire, who he led to precisely no victories in eight games in the Hundred after struggling in Cardiff. talk about a sliding doors call for England.

It was trevor Bayliss who said a good coach puts himself out of a job because he allows the players to take responsibi­lity, and McCullum has been the epitome of that approach ever since he strolled into Lord’s in his jeans, white trainers and dark glasses. Everything about McCullum has been about fun, enjoyment and entertainm­ent, banishing pressure and the fear of failure.

Practices have been short and the coach has cut a hugely relaxed figure on the periphery of nets or on the team balcony. ‘I don’t really do a lot, to be honest,’ he insisted in the aftermath of England’s sixth win in seven tests this summer.

‘Just let the guys do what they’re born to do — play cricket in the style and manner they want and try to bring the group together and make sure they’re enjoying themselves.

‘My job is to ensure we’re always reminding ourselves this job is meant to be the greatest time of our lives, being a cricketer at the highest level and trying to create memories you look back over in time. there’s results but it’s also the fun and the camaraderi­e you build up. Hopefully we’ve been able to achieve that.’

McCullum may play down his role in the transforma­tion of England, but do not listen to a word of it. He is no Chauncey Gardiner in Being There. He is one of the most important and influentia­l figures cricket has seen in the last 10 years.

and it is to England’s huge benefit that Key could see what a man with no red-ball coaching experience could bring, when few others looked beyond the usual suspects.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Blade runner: McCullum has cut a relaxed figure
GETTY IMAGES Blade runner: McCullum has cut a relaxed figure

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