logo
England Team Director Makes Huge Statement On Crucial No. 3 Spot For 1st Test: "It Is A..."

England Team Director Makes Huge Statement On Crucial No. 3 Spot For 1st Test: "It Is A..."

NDTV4 days ago

England's team's managing director Rob Key said that the battle for number three spot in the playing XI for first India Test between Ollie Pope and Jacob Bethell would not define either player's career and it is a "good position to be in". England will have a huge selection call to take as either Pope or Bethell will bat at the coveted number three spot, and the other one could miss out on being a part of the playing XI completely. Key has framed the call as a decision as to "which really good player" they should pick and said, "It is a good position to be in."
During the one-off Test against Zimbabwe earlier in late-May, Pope scored 171 to continue his string of strong showings at number three, scoring 2,024 runs in 28 Tests and 48 innings at an average of 43.06, with seven centuries and fifties each.
On the other hand, Bethell slammed three brilliant fifties at the same position against New Zealand last December, a series which saw Pope keeping wickets and shifting down the order to accommodate a player who is being hyped as the team's next superstar.
Speaking to the Telegraph's cricket podcast, Key said that it is a win-win situation either way.
"You have got two brilliant players who can do that role. Ollie Pope's been fantastic in that tough spot; he played brilliantly in New Zealand... alright, he was in a different role, but we have got two brilliant options in those spots," he said.
"A tough decision is when you have got no options, and you have got to just try and find something from nowhere. That is when I am sort of scratching my head. This one is: 'Which really good player are we going to pick?' It is a good position to be in," he added.
Bethell missed the Test match against Zimbabwe as he was busy with Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in the Indian Premier League (IPL). While ex-English batter Michael Atherton criticised Bethell for preferring franchise over Test cricket, Key said he had no regrets.
"I do not think that the careers of Ollie Pope and Jacob Bethell are defined by what happens this week, or whether he came back to play the Zimbabwe Test. He may not have played that Test match," Key said.
"Watching his development has been extraordinary, and his going out there and playing in the IPL, I think, was brilliant for him. We will get the return on that in the future," he added.
Key also suggested the express pacer Mark Wood, currently out due to knee injury, has an outside chance of being picked during the back-end of the series.
"He potentially could be ready for the back end," he said. "You may see him by the end of the series, but certainly then when you fast-forward to the Ashes, he should be fine for that," he concluded.
The first Test of the five-match series, kickstarting both teams' ICC World Test Championship (WTC) 2025-27 cycle, will start from June 20 onwards.
The English squad: Ben Stokes (Durham) - Captain, Shoaib Bashir (Somerset), Jacob Bethell (Warwickshire), Harry Brook (Yorkshire), Brydon Carse (Durham), Sam Cook (Essex), Zak Crawley (Kent), Ben Duckett (Nottinghamshire), Jamie Overton (Surrey), Ollie Pope (Surrey), Joe Root (Yorkshire), Jamie Smith (Surrey), Josh Tongue (Nottinghamshire), Chris Woakes (Warwickshire).

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

IND vs ENG: 'India's most successful wicketkeeper-batsman' - Praises pour in for Rishabh Pant after cracking start to England tour
IND vs ENG: 'India's most successful wicketkeeper-batsman' - Praises pour in for Rishabh Pant after cracking start to England tour

Time of India

time9 minutes ago

  • Time of India

IND vs ENG: 'India's most successful wicketkeeper-batsman' - Praises pour in for Rishabh Pant after cracking start to England tour

Rishabh Pant (Getty Images) Rishabh Pant sparked back to become the talk of the town with his record seventh Test century as he touched the three-figure mark en route his knock of 134 runs against England at Headingely in Leeds on Saturday. Powered by 12 fours and six maximums, Pant was a sight to behold on the crease as he blended his aggressive strokeplay with an occasional balanced approach to always keep the English bowling unit guessing, thus maximising scoring opportunities in all areas of the field. Former India international Dinesh Karthik , who has shared the national dressing room with Pant, hailed him as the country's best-ever wicketkeeper-batsman in Tests. He appreciated the adaptability the 27-year-old has shown in away tours, having bagged centuries in Australia, South Africa, and thrice in England. In addition to seven tons, Pant also has 15 half-centuries including seven 90+ scores in merely 44 Test matches, as Karthik believes that he was born to play in this format. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 'Without a shadow of doubt, he is India's most successful wicketkeeper-batsman. He has improved his keeping. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Buy Brass Laxmi Ji Idol For Wealth, Peace & Happiness Luxeartisanship Shop Now Undo The best thing about Rishabh Pant is how well he has adapted to travel. He has gone and scored centuries in Australia, South Africa, and now thrice in England. It just tells you how comfortable he is with playing Test cricket anywhere. It comes to him naturally. He is very aggressive. Look, he is a superstar. He is always going to take risks. He is going to do whatever is against the grain at the moment. If you feel he has to defend, he will hit, if you feel he has to hit, he will end up defending. I will never judge him for his shot selection,' Karthik said on Cricbuzz. Besides that though, Pant has also naturally evolved in his glovework ever since debuting in the longest format in 2018. Back then, he was often found wanting judging the trajectory of the moving ball. This time around, he looks much at ease in those duties, and noted pundit Navjot Singh Sidhu talks highly of the same, along with the fact that he is impeccable in reading game situations, a hallmark that separates him from the rest of his peers. 'Rishabh Pant has been a revolutionary figure on the field. Besides his batting, you see his smarts behind the stumps too. You saw it when there was slight rain during the English innings. He asked the umpire to stop the play just like they had done during the Indian innings. It was very clever of him to suggest so. He is such a character! He is an endearing person. Whatever he has on his lips, is what he does on the field. As clear as that,' Sidhu said on Star Sports. Whilst praise from fellow countrymen is natural, Pant has also been making heads turn amongst the English cricketing fraternity. Several Indian fans remained glued to the stands even after stumps on Day 2 to catch a glimpse of the maverick wicketkeeper, as former captain and Sky Sports analyst Nasser Hussain called Pant an absolute box office entertainer who compels people to watch cricket in whites due to his exploits. Sitanshu Kotak press conference: Big revelation on Shubman Gill "It's an incredible last two days from Rishabh Pant. Good or bad, the block or the swipe, whether it's the last day of the Test match, the last over of Day 1, the hundred on Day 2, the celebration for the same, or even the way he got out, the wicketkeeping - he has always got a smile on his face! There are a lot of Indian fans here still waiting on the ground! Rishabh Pant is absolutely box office. Everyone loves watching this lad play," Hussain said. Having been handed the vice-captaincy duties, Pant has additional responsibilities on his shoulders in this mammoth five-match tour of England. However, he showed little to no signs of budging under that pressure as he went about business as usual in Leeds on the first two days of the Test match. With seniors retired, the Men in Blue are embarking on a new era altogether in red-ball cricket, and Pant has all the promise and potential to become the torchbearer of the country's cricketing carnival for the years to come. Follow all the live updates, scores, and highlights from the India vs England Test match here . Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

Shafali Verma: ‘I have matured as a cricketer and value my wicket more'
Shafali Verma: ‘I have matured as a cricketer and value my wicket more'

Indian Express

time12 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Shafali Verma: ‘I have matured as a cricketer and value my wicket more'

Poised to return to Indian scheme of things, former women's prodigy Shafali Verma said the time away from the team after she was dropped has matured her and she will be smarter now and respect bowlers before she explodes, as her talent permits. India's T20 side will start their campaign against English women on June 28. Verma averages a lowly 20 in England, but is scoring upwards of a 150 strike rate in Women's Premier League (WPL) for Delhi Capitals. Talking to Hindustan Times, Verma said, 'At the start, I was carefree and hit every ball I faced. I enjoyed dominating the bowlers, going for big shots. I have matured as a cricketer and value my wicket more. I want to contribute to every game so that my team benefits.' Her renewed approach, she told HT was pragmatic. 'I won't say my style has changed much, but yes, I will be defensive too, and give respect to good bowlers. England has good bowlers like Nat Sciver-Brunt and Sophie Ecclestone. So, I won't just throw my wicket,' she stressed. Her time away from sport had taught her plenty. 'In a sport, there will be ups and downs. I, too, have faced failures and disappointments, but I have learnt from them. Hard work and passion to play for India have kept me going', Verma told HT. For someone who got off to a flyer with her half century record being compared to men's cricketer Sachin Tendulkar, Verma had suffered a dip in form and was ommitted from India sides. She has over 1000 T20I runs but this comeback is a crucial second chance for someone who couldn't curb her feisty instincts and paid with her wicket often. Verma credited her Delhi Capitals captain, Meg Laning, for bringing in a revised perspective in her strokeplay. She had spent a few days preparing at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru to hone her skills, beforev joining old teammates ahead of the upcoming ICC Women's ODI World Cup in India & Sri Lanka. 'It is a matter of pride that India is hosting. I'm sure India will do well and make use of the home advantage. At the moment, my job is to do well in the T20Is in England. I hope to leave an impression, and then it is left to the selectors,' she told HT. 'Getting to represent your country is a dream come true. I have fought through disappointments and turned them (opportunities) into rewards with hard work. I now look forward to playing big knocks for India and showing my positive intent,' she added.

IND vs ENG: How a village of 7000 raised England cricket's Prince Harry Brook
IND vs ENG: How a village of 7000 raised England cricket's Prince Harry Brook

Indian Express

time20 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

IND vs ENG: How a village of 7000 raised England cricket's Prince Harry Brook

Saturday was the year's longest day but at the village Burley-in-Wharfedale club they wanted it to be longer. They had won an important league game and the boy from their village Harry Brook, playing a Test about 14 miles away, was unbeaten at stumps on Day 2 at Headingley. The bar was busy, laughs kept emerging from tables with families. No one wanted to call it a day. After furiously talking about cricket, players and members got involved in some fun football. A little boy, of around five, tirelessly chased the ball and everyone indulged him. Brook was that boy not many years back. Now, he is England's big batting hope, white-ball captain and clearly the heir-apparent prince to Test skipper, Ben Stokes. A 30 minute drive through rolling hills and tranquil meadows with all shades of earthy colours takes one to the village with a population of 7000. Rural Yorkshire can inspire oil paintings, and cricketers. The village's centre is the Burley-in-Wharfedale club that is surrounded by typically English terrace houses. It also has an inviting club house, the water hole that many villagers would call their second home. There is a dispensary on one-side and kitchen gardens on the other. Harry's hits, they say here, would end either in surgery room or squash ripe red tomatoes. His one-time coach David Cooper gives a short tour of the place and the name 'Brook' keeps popping from everywhere – on the photo frames of triumphant little leagues, honour boards of club captains, a beautifully crafted wooden bench and on a home whose garden lawn is virtually the out-field of this quaint cricket ground. The charming little cottage next to the sight screen where Harry's grandparents lived and that's where the man who scored 99 at Headingley would spend his vacations. Under overcast conditions, Brook took on Bumrah & Co, and was imperious in disarming their attack, till he was gone on a Bazbally 99. It's not just Harry who's responsible for the 'Brook' footprints at this club. His grandfather, two uncles and father have led Burley-in-Wharfedale in Yorkshire's premier division, a prestigious league around here. Like that little boy, who everyone gave time to on Saturday, Harry was the one who this village was invested in and had taken the responsibility of grooming into a fine batsman. Listening to Cooper gives an idea about the bond the club and its members have with their Harry. Cooper talks about the day when Harry made his Test debut against South Africa at the Oval in 2023. That day Burley-in-Wharfedale had a game. Generally on match day, the coach says, the bar is empty and everyone is out watching the game. On Harry's debut, it changed. 'As soon as Harry walked in to bat, someone from the bar shouted out loud – 'Harry's in'. It was like an alarm going off, the ground emptied in minutes and the ground was empty,' he said. This was followed by a little private moment the coach had on watching his ward. 'On his first ball, Harry was facing the tall South African bowler Marco Jansen. Jansen bowled a length ball and Harry did what I had trained him for years – he moved back, got into line, played the ball late and under his eyes. Exactly like I have told him to,' says Cooper. There are those who say that Cooper had misty eyes that day. The coach doesn't deny as he says, 'I think there was some dust that flew into my eye or maybe it could be a tear.' At Headingley also, in the ongoing Test, Harry had started his innings by the same copy-book correct forward defensive stroke against Jasprit Bumrah. Cooper then ambles to the net-area where a father is giving throwdowns to his son. The coach points to a small green mat with an artificial grass top. It was on it with two plastic feet pasted on it with Velcro, they could move around. Cooper has designed the 'coaching mat' to explain to his pupils the correct feet position when hitting every shot in the book. Harry's wagon-wheel and his 360 degree range of strokes at Headingley shows Burley-in-Wharfedale has groomed a world class, all-format player. And also a captain who was made aware about the nuance of field placements and bowling changes very early in life. Cooper says that when Harry was named the captain for the West Indies tour a few months back, there was this joke at the club about him doing well. As a youngster, while on vacation, Harry had spent long hours watching cricket with the ever-demanding captain of Burley-in-Wharfedale, his grandfather Tony. 'Tony would be there complaining about field positions and bowling changes and young Harry would be absorbing all that. Listening to the real critique from a real expert would surely come in handy as an England captain,' says Cooper, a stodgy opener from the time he played alongside Garry Sobers, Joel Garner, Rohan Kanhai and Carl Hooper in the Central Lancashire League. Captaincy was something that got ingrained in him organically, the batting lessons were grilled into him at the cricket-crazy Brook house. 'His uncle Richard would say that they would bowl underarm to him in the living room, and in the lounge part of downstairs they obviously could see he was a talented young toddler with a good hand-eye coordination,' says Cooper. There are a couple incidents that convinced Cooper that he had under his wings a special player committed to the sport and blessed with a robust temperament. The first one happened one cold October evening when staying indoors was a much more comfortable option. ''On that gloomy day, I peeped over the fence, into the club, and I saw a young Harry running around the ground, finishing his laps with push-ups and stuff, and then running again. For a month, in that wet month, he was out there doing his stuff,' recalls Cooper, who was asked by Harry's uncle Nick to come and train their club's future first-teamer. It was during his stint with the junior team, that Cooper saw Harry play a very feisty game where the opposition were trying everything to win. 'They were sledging, there was time-wasting and bending every rule. Harry played a match-winning knock there. He scored about 30 and he saw us home in a very tense situation. That talks about temperament as a 14-year-old boy,' he says. While playing for England he has shown the same grit and when leading, like against the West Indies, there have been no signs of nerves. Kevin Pietersen says 'he is the future', Nasser Hussain sticks his neck out to say 'he is going to be a superstar in all formats.' And after the West Indies series sweep, in his debut as captain, coach Brendon McCullum says the new captain's calm and poise can rub off on other players. Much-needed breakthrough for #TeamIndia! 🔥#PrasidhKrishna grabs his third wicket of the Test, dismissing #HarryBrook on 99! 💥 Will #TeamIndia's bowlers finish off the English tail in a flash? 👀#ENGvIND 1st Test Day 3 LIVE NOW Streaming on JioHotstar 👉… — Star Sports (@StarSportsIndia) June 22, 2025 Harry's grandmother, Pauline, too has played a big role in his smooth cricketing journey. She would be the one driving Harry all over Yorkshire for his junior games. She would also be at award functions collecting awards since Harry was on some cricketing tour. 'She was the one who made sure that he was always on time at games. She would support him when he would do well and also when he didn't do well. In a game like cricket if you can't do well all the time and you need someone who can put an arm around your shoulder to say 'never mind, you know there is another game next week'. She played a big role behind the scenes in his development,' he says. Harry's grandparents, who planted the cricket seed in him, are no longer there. Tony passed away in 2012 and Pauline in 2024. The grandmother's death was the reason Harry missed the tour to India. At Burley-in-Wharfedale club on the boundary rope in front of the Brooks house, is a wooden bench that keeps the memories of Tony and Pauline alive. 'Harry's father is a carpenter, he with his own hand made this bench,' says Cooper. It isn't merely a bench, it's a tribute to the Brooks who stepped out of their front porch and walked into the Burley-in-Wharfedale XI. And then came Harry, he went further ahead and promises to keep marching on. Playing his first Test near home with his grandmother not in the stands, Harry came to his team's aid when India were threatening to run away with the game. Leed's cheered wildly as he launched England's counter attack. Like at Burley-in-Wharfedale on Saturday, Leeds wanted the day, and Harry's innings, to be longer. It didn't. But an entertaining 99 by the home boy was much-appreciated than the three hundreds by the visitors.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store