Test Match Special - Duckett century sparks England fightback
Episode Date: June 26, 2026Simon Mann is alongside former England captain Michael Vaughan, Ashes-winning bowler Steven Finn and BBC chief cricket commentator Jonathan Agnew for reaction to the second day's play between England ...and New Zealand at Trent Bridge.Hear from Ben Duckett after he scored his seventh Test century at his home ground, and Daryl Mitchell reflects on a difficult day for New Zealand.Plus, England’s new selector Marcus North speaks to Aggers about how he’s finding his new role working alongside Ben Stokes, Brendon McCullum, and Rob Key.Also, Andy Zaltzman breaks the day down with a stat attack.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.
He's widely recognised as one of the greatest footballers in history.
He's won the prestigious Ballandour Award five times.
He's the all-time leading goal scorer in professional football.
And according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index,
he's the first active footballer in history to achieve billionaire status.
Guess who we're talking about yet?
That's right. Good Bad Billionaire is exploring the life and fortune of football icon Cristiano Ronaldo.
That's a good bad billionaire from the BBC World Service.
Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
This is the TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live.
Sandler moves in and bowls to Duckett.
Stretch his four. Turns into the onsite.
They're off a quick single.
Throw comes at the non-strikers, and it's wide.
Duckett's home for 100.
It's his seventh in test match cricket.
It'll mean such a lot to him.
After a lean year,
missed by Henry Nichols on 8, but he has made them most of it.
Helmet off, and there's some relief in that celebration.
And why wouldn't there be after the spell he's been through?
But he's home and he's made it count.
The TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live.
Welcome to our review of the second day of this third and deciding test match
between England and New Zealand at Trent Bridge.
And what a position England are in after a really tough first day
in which New Zealand scored 361 before they were 317 for no wicket.
New Zealand bowled out for 438 and by the closer play.
England 223 for 2 with Bethel 74 not out and a seventh test 100 for Ben Duckett
who made 113.
Ben Stokes, the star with the ball.
3 for 13 in the spell of 8 overs, 4 for 70 overall.
A couple of wickets for Bashir and Archer finishing it off.
So 438 all out, 6 for 67 today and 30 overs.
And New Zealand losing their last 10 wickets for 121 to review the day.
Michael Vaughn and Jonathan Agnew.
Well, Agnes, cricket can confound you.
I mean, who would have thought yesterday at 300 for no wicket
that we've been in this situation in the game after two days?
Well, New Zealand certainly didn't.
I mean, they will look back.
They've had their moments.
A couple of poor shots yesterday, I know, it's hot,
and they've caught me, batting a long time,
and all those sorts of things.
You can offer excuses.
If you're looking at moments in which the game changed,
then you have to say that those two dismissals,
him and Revin Jove were culpable.
And then I thought Ben Stokes was terrific today with the ball.
He bowled a better length.
It's quite a skill to bowl successfully to lower order batsmen.
and the night watch when O'Rourke
is perfectly happy with that really full length
is tempting to bowl too full
because you want to hit the stumps
you think he can't bat
it averages two, he's going to miss a straight ball
well you know a lot of bats are quite happy
low-order bats and can just pat that back
the skill is bowling just that fraction
short of a length
that's when someone like a Rourke
will get confused and misread length
and get out and Stokes
is brilliant of doing that
and it bowls a long spell
inspirational in the heat
I'll tell you what I think is going
it's a thought, after all the nonsense of the last couple of weeks.
I think we're going to Bazball revisited in this game.
You see the way the New Zealand bowled there and what they've got,
that's a flimsy attack.
And I can just see what if, you know, it's way down the line.
But you can just see England coming out
and repeating what they did here four years ago,
smashing that attack all over the place,
would in the game, and everything's marvellous again.
Well, we've seen some fluctuations in this game.
Perhaps let's not get too far ahead of ourselves,
but you can see how they're going to, you can see, you know,
the game might progress here.
Michael, I mean, people will look at this.
10-421 New Zealand's collapse.
I think, well, something wrong with the pitch?
Or, but it wasn't, was it?
No, absolutely.
No, England, I totally agree with Aggers, actually.
I thought yesterday they didn't quite have the aura of the four years ago team.
But if you actually look at what they've done today,
it's exactly what the team four years ago did.
You know, get wickets from pretty much nowhere.
you look at New Zealand
they've made some glaring errors
with the bat particular those two late
wickets last night which shouldn't
really have happened
and then England just probed away they came a bit tighter
this morning they got it a little bit fuller
made it very difficult for New Zealand
New Zealand for me
they didn't quite have the ump in their batting this morning
A bit passive do you think? Yeah it was like they were waiting for the bad ball
whereas they weren't really trying to
put them under pressure at the England
bowler so England have had a tremendous
to stay. Ben Duckett's
a play that you can't give a chance to.
And that third slip drop catch
when he was on eight. Joe Root would have
been walking out there what in the fourth over
of the innings when a rope was
bowling quick and there was a bit of bounce there
with a new ball. And that
really is a big talking point.
And maybe at the end of the test
we'll be looking at that again because
I think if they'd have got Ben Duckett out
for eight and England would have been 15
for two. You know, I think we
could have been talking about a different day. But
England have managed to completely dominate the day
with some really good batting,
some wonderful play by Jacob Bethel and Ben Ducky,
but it's that man Ben Stokes.
With the ball in hand this morning,
he makes things happen.
He just gets wickets when England desperately need
someone to do something over the last few years,
particularly at this test match side,
it's generally been Ben Stokes.
Effort and energy, isn't he?
He just, I mean, it's an old cliche about leading from the front,
but he really does with the ball.
there's no one tries harder than Stokes
and he stood up head and shoulders by the other state
I'm not saying others weren't trying
but somehow Stokes has just got that
he's got that little bit extra
because the first 40 minutes today
nothing much was happening for England
no and what Joff Rajah ball
what three overs and five balls
taken off you think okay you know
you got the night watchman
I didn't think actually that he in particular
really got stuck into the night watchman enough
and tongue for that matter
that watchman doesn't do average of two
doesn't want to be facing balls whistling
around his ears
And there wasn't enough of that for me.
They were, as I said earlier, just trying to,
they were trying to hit the stumps.
And it was only when Stokes came on that he said,
dropped that length a little bit, that the Rort really looked troubled.
Up until then, he played very easily.
Yeah, absolutely right.
I mean, I look at this pitch,
and I'm trying to work out what's going to happen to it,
because we have seen the odd ball that's bounds.
We have seen the odd ball that's kept low.
We've seen no spin.
Santana's not played any cricket,
red ball cricket for a long period of time.
Really showed, didn't it?
Yeah, he looked rusty.
you look at this New Zealand bowling attack
on this kind of wicket
and you don't want to disrespect New Zealand
but as a batter
you know it's in your favour
Okay two men of the day for England today
Ben Stokes for that fine spell
but also Ben Duckett as well
is seventh test match 100
113 before he played on to Nathan Smith
and he joins us live now
from down on the outfield
Many congratulations
Ben what was that feeling like
when you've notched that 100
after the time
you've had really
an international cricket recently
Yeah I mean
I think everyone saw with
you know how I celebrated the 100
how much it meant to me
yeah it was actually quite emotional
obviously my home ground
and yeah you said it
I haven't been you know
scoring the runs I'd have liked
so you know
after being in the heat for a day and a half
and to go out there and you know
score 100 at this ground
yeah it meant the world
me. Did it help actually being at home? You just felt comfortable here? I mean, obviously I know
the dimensions and everything, but yeah, I guess having success here. I think I've been playing well
recently and, you know, I just haven't had that score and just kind of trusting my game and, you know,
playing my natural way and, you know, I'm really glad I did that. So you haven't tried to do anything
anything different, just keep
playing and hope that
works eventually. I mean, I've
been working really hard on my game
in the nets and stuff
and in the counter-championship
stuff leading up to this and
my fitness as well, which probably
helps on the day like today. But
just trusting the way that I play and
trusting the hard work that I've put in
that, you know, there was going to be a
score around the corner. And when you see
that catch go down when you've made
8, do you think, actually this could be it? Because you
had the unfortunate runout at the Oval, you know, you were playing well and you were scoring quickly
and then you were out and then, but today kind of, it's funny how cricket works, isn't it?
Yeah, that's the game and, you know, the run out, you know, when you're in form, that misses
and you go on and score runs there. And, you know, I wasn't necessarily thinking it today,
but obviously on a good pitch like that, you know, we know what it's like in the field.
You don't want to, you don't want to miss out on opportunities.
You don't want to have to try and get someone out two or three times.
Yeah, I mean, I'm very thankful that that got put down on another day.
You know, I'm in the hut for eight or whatever I was on.
I mean, collectively, it was 300, whatever, for no wicket yesterday.
What's that like as a team and what sort of conversations are you having out there?
Well, I think you've, you know, everyone saw.
You know, we gave absolutely everything and we never gave in.
I think, you know, certainly in that heat, you know, they could have gone on to score 5, 6, 700.
you know we kept believing in what we do and we you know we never wanted to throw the towel in and I don't know what we were today I think it was around 100 for seven and I just think it was an incredible effort from our bowlers to you know keep us in a game where we can actually go and win it from this position you know if we don't do that and they bat better there we're you know there's only probably one team who can win so you know I'd say the game's in the balance right now and you know we've got to do the same thing to me to me
tomorrow and try and bat as long as we can and get ourselves in a position where you know the
game's on the line and both sides can win and what's it like having ben stokes back in the team
i mean his spell was you know a massive reason of why we're in this position today you know he
he deserved five and and more you know the work that he puts in and you know i don't know how many
overshee bowled but to keep running in like he did you know in this heat after a full day in the
And that's exactly why everyone loves having Ben Stokes leading this team.
He leads by example and it's very easy to follow that because he's doing it.
Well, he bowled eight overs in that spell.
Just one final question, Ben.
What about this surface?
You play here a lot.
What do you expect to happen to this pitch?
I mean, it feels very dry.
Yeah, I mean, obviously I play a lot of county cricket here, so it's a bit different.
But I think with the heat, you know, it might spin a bit later.
on, certainly the longer we bat, obviously, we're probably going to be the team batting last,
but we're in a position where we've got England's greatest at the crease and Jacob playing
really well. If we win the morning session and then a session after that and just trying to be
as ruthless as we can, hopefully we can get a lead on this pitch, which is going to be massive.
Even me chopping on today, it's going to be that kind of pitch down the line where you want to be
bowling as much as you can at the stumps and trying to create dismissals that way.
Ben, many congratulations, well played.
I'm going to have a rest.
Can't have an early night.
Thank you.
I can't wait.
I'm sure on this very hot day here at Trent Bridge, 113 for Ben Duckett, an 88 ball 100.
Yeah, brilliant.
I like the way you said, have an early night.
That's advisable with this England team.
Oh, yeah, he's a wonderful player.
It makes it so difficult for bowlers.
It hits the bowlers better balls to the boundary.
You know, I think if you look at New Zealand where they bowed to him today,
I thought the ball a little bit too wide, and they freed him up.
That's exactly where he wants the ball.
I think to Bend Duky, you've got to come a little bit tighter.
But even when they came tight with the older ball,
he had great balance to work it through on the onside.
He took on the short ball with control.
Obviously, he was out to the short ball last week at the oval,
but he controlled his pull shots nicely.
And I think you get in your career,
grounds that you just like.
This is his home venue. His test record
here now is exceptional.
He got a big hundred last year against
Zimbabwe. He's obviously got another one now.
A couple of 70 odds against New Zealand, the last
time round. You're kind of looking at
a player that just knows the venue
and that little pocket in the corner
which is such a short hit
down to that side. He just seems
to be able to open the blade.
From quite straight deliveries to cause
chaos with the captain from whoever
he's playing against. And he must be
nightmare the captain against because you kind of spread the field and there's loads of gaps and
he can just work it into gaps so you're never getting a dot ball against him and he can still find
the boundary when the boundary riders are put out on either side so yeah a wonderful inning's what
88 ball 100 it's his second I think he got one in Rajcott a few years ago a similar rate and
it kind of reminded me when when the bad ballers have been really good with the bat in hand it's
generally when Dukets got England off to a flying start and that was a nice reminder
of what we've seen over the last few years.
There was evidence of the reset, though,
the way he spoke, I thought.
I mean, often you've got some utterly maverick interviews
with Ben Duckett over the years, didn't me?
I mean, nonsense.
That was a really controlled, calm, thoughtful, honest,
you know, you said at the start about,
the lack of runs he'd had, and he admitted it.
It wouldn't have said that a couple of years ago.
You'd have had a bit of a feisty response,
and I thought he batted like that.
He batted at a great rate,
but it wasn't...
Didn't feel frantic at all, did it?
He just played beautifully.
He just played beautifully.
And if that's the way that he's going to play from now on,
and that's going to be his approach and his attitude,
well, I think that's brilliant.
It just seemed to stand out to me.
I've interviewed him many times
and never quite know what you're going to get to you.
That was excellent.
It was really considered honest, thoughtful.
But also, I mean, I know it's the talking point,
but they all are absolutely desperate for Ben Stokes to lead them.
Ben Stokes drives this team.
I can never put a percentage on what Ben Stokes.
Stokes is worth to this test team, but it's beyond 20%.
Because of what he brings in terms of his bowling, in terms of his, you know,
his bat has not been great of later.
He was the first to admit that, but it's his energy and it's his body language and it's
his persona.
And I think they all kind of get behind him and go, we'll just follow the leader.
So Ingram with Ben Stokes at the helm is obviously in test cricket in particularly
a much stronger team.
Another left hand has had a lean time of it in this series.
is he didn't have a lean time in the ashes he played that magnificent innings at
Sydney Jacob bethel what about him today
I think very beautifully you know he's I love about Bethel and a lot of
left-handed bats and seem to stand quite tall when they drive and actually in some ways
it can be really attractive but it can also be a be a failing not it's a little
bit a little bit upright a little bit away from the body I love the way he drives
he's right into the shot his knee bed
ends, isn't he? And he's so low. His whole body is kind of going with the line of the shot.
He played some wonderful, wonderful strokes today. I mean, he is immensely talented.
He should score thousands of runs for England. But it's just the way that particularly stands out for me.
It's that really compact way. I know Michael talked much more technically about batting than I ever could.
But that just stands out to me that he's right in it. He's absolutely right in the shot.
very controlled.
It doesn't strike me as being one of those left-handed bats
and he could be a little bit upright
and a bit drivy and edge to slip.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's a quality player.
I mean, we've seen that in Sydney.
We've seen it in whiteball cricket as well.
I think he'd be the first to admit
that Ben Duckett really helped him.
You know, because the scoreboard was flying
because Ben Duckett was playing so beautifully.
So as a player at the other end,
you're not worried about the scoreboard.
You're not panicking that the scoreboard's not flying.
You've got your partner who's playing so.
well putting the opposition bowlers under pressure.
And when you get a player like Duket who does that, you know, a bowler generally going,
well, you know, I guess there's a ball, you're bowling safe because you don't want to go
for too many more.
And I felt they, they bowed okay to him at the start.
There's a couple of those balls that knit back that have had him out LBW in the first two
test matches that, you know, on another day when the pitch is a bit fast, it could have
been caught on the crease, but he finds a way.
You know, he finds a way.
He came out of his crease and he worked.
on the on side a few times
so he's saying to the ball, I'm not going to get
trapped on the crease. I'm going to try and say to you
that I'm going to come out of the crease. The keeper came up and he
played it nice and late.
Yeah, those cover drives are poetry.
They really are. And he doesn't try,
I mean, Joe Root played a cover drive at the
back end there. It was like a forward defense
and it went for four.
Yeah, you know, two players from Sheffield
Collegiate. You know, Joe Root,
Jacob's dad, Graham, was the captain. I'm sure.
I think he arrives tomorrow, Graham, from Barbados.
so hopefully he gets here for 11 o'clock
because if his son can survive half an hour,
we all know that in test cricket, any cricket,
you've got to start again tomorrow.
If they can still be there at half past 11,
it wouldn't surprise me at all
if both this pair get three figures.
And Glory B for Bethel, first innings runs,
because that hasn't happened very much
in his short test match career so far.
I wonder what New Zealand are thinking tonight.
I wonder kind of kicking themselves, really.
When you think of the position they were in,
yesterday. Well, let's find out. Daniel Norcross
has been speaking to Darrell Mitchell.
So Darrell, a really tough day for New Zealand today, but
still well in the game. Yeah, look, we've obviously still got a lead and
I thought, you know, in the first things, if you see we're going to get 460,
you'd take that most time. So, yeah, for us, it's now, it's building a period
of pressure in the morning and trying to take a few wickets and see what this game
will bring us. You've been hit by a few blows in this game. Before the game
started, the loss of Matt Henry, Carl Jameson, and now
Blair Tickner as well. That's really good to stretch your bowlers.
Yeah, look, firstly, it's never ideal when you lose
a number one bowler in the world and Matt Henry, plus
Cole Jamelson's not far behind, but also gutted for ticks.
We know how excited he was for this test match and the sort of energy
that he can bring with the ball, but yeah, I know he's probably not feeling too great
right now, so hopefully he can recover well and you'll see him soon.
All eyes are on the pitch because a lot of runs being scored quite quickly,
but also things are happening quite quickly. Give us an assessment of the service.
surface? Look, I think that's probably a reflection of when you do play England. They do find ways
to fast forward the game, shall we say, whether that be basball or whatever you want to put it.
But yeah, for us, it's trying to be really consistent with how we want to operate both with bat and ball
and be ruthless at times. Look, obviously, I think we didn't start the way we wanted to with the ball,
but I think the way we pegged it back in that last hour and showed how we want to operate tomorrow is really clear.
Did you say that England's bowling plans changed from yesterday to today? It looked to us like they've gone a little bit
straighter. Yeah look I thought they bowled really well this morning and they obviously got their
rewards with it. I was out there for that first sort of hour and yeah I thought the way that they
operated it was was very good instead of blueprint for how we wanted to try and do it as well so
look test cricket this is why we love it it's it's bloody hard but it's bloody good fun as well.
Finally I want to ask you about your dismissal that looked like the thinest possible edge. Did you feel
it? No I thought I hit my pad and yeah it's one of those ones where the game tests you and find ways
to annoy you but yeah that's also why we love it as we come back and we show up again and we get
stuck in. Darrell, a bit of a tough day today. Best of like tomorrow. Cheers, thank you. Darrell Mitchell
talking to Daniel Norcross. Stephen Finn is here. So collectively that New Zealand bowling group
have somehow got to get together, find some plans that work tomorrow. Otherwise, England,
they could get a decisive lead in this game. Yeah. And actually I thought for the last hour
and 15 minutes.
They actually bowled really well
because they aligned
and they found a method
and one that's worked actually
against England throughout this series.
Keep her up to the stumps.
Keep the ball within the width of the stumps
and challenge England to play across the line.
It got them the wicket of Duckett off the inside edge
and then it built pressure through the back end of the day
as well and they'd have felt much more in control of the game.
It's just a shame for them the two hours
that transpired before that meant that
even though England are a long way behind in terms of runs,
it feels like England are ahead of the game at the moment
with the way it's playing out in front of us.
Yeah, I mean, Daryl Mitchell there, you know,
talking about Matt Henry and Jameson,
they kind of disrupted a winning side.
The situation has disrupted, you know,
the injury to Henry and the feeling that Jameson can't play
and then tickner out of the attack as well.
It feels such a different New Zealand attack now.
It is, and yeah, it's just such a shame, isn't it?
Obviously, people get injured
and you have to protect bowlers,
especially ones who've had bad injuries,
but it would have been a really, really excited.
This might transpire into a really exciting test match.
But, yeah, we're...
Yeah, let's not call it too early.
There's a feel, isn't there,
that England are sort of suddenly a real grip of the game.
Yes, and it can change very quickly,
which we have to remember.
But I more think that it just would have been a fascinating test match
with Henry and the narrative of the keeper being up to the stumps
and the 10thor and Jameson.
being a brilliant test bowler who averages around 20,
you put those two guys into the mix today with 438 on the board.
It might just look a bit different now.
It's easy to say it, isn't it?
And it's a final question.
It's easy to say it when you're in the field and it's 300 for no wicket.
Oh, you just got to keep going and find some energy and all that.
But that was a remarkable turnaround, wasn't it?
It was.
And I think that's credit to the team for just hanging in there.
Me and Cookie were on air early.
And we're talking about hanging in there and staying tough is,
a skill in test match cricket to be able to run in with the same gusto and commit to your plans,
even though the scoreboard is completely against you, is a really challenging thing to do.
And England did that.
And they were rewarded for that with those two wickets late in the day yesterday.
And they carried that momentum into today led by their captain, Ben Stokes,
who in his usual talismanic way, grabbed the ball and said,
I'm bowling an eight over spell in this 35 degree heat.
And I'm going to change the course of this game.
and he did, and everything at that stage,
the momentum was completely rolled in England's favour,
and that's the way the rest of the day has happened.
Indeed. Stephen, thank you very much,
and his ozanceman is a long side.
And you're going to start with Stokes in your statistical roundup of the day.
Yes, well, that eight overspell three for 13,
took him to 250 test wickets,
the ninth England cricketer to take 250 or more test wickets.
Only he and South Africa's Jacques Callis have
250 wickets and more than 6,000 test runs.
And his recent form with the ball has been tremendous.
His last 14 tests, 47 wickets, average 24.
And today's spell was the third time in those 14 tests
that he's had a three-wicket spell
or more. He had a five-wicket spell
in the first Ashes test in Perth.
And he'd only had one three-wicket spell
in his previous 44 tests.
He'd not bowled in quite a few of them,
were not bowled very much, been injured,
had taken 11 wickets in 22 matches before that recent run of 14 matches
in which he's taken 47 wickets.
So that's been a huge factor in England's cricket recently.
With the bat, mixed fortunes for England's openers, Emilio Gay,
got a duck feathering one down the leg's side,
the other three openers in the game all scored hundreds.
That's only happened once in the history of test cricket,
one opening getting a duck,
and the other three getting centuries in the first innings of the test.
but Ben Duckett, no 50s in his previous 14 innings
that's one of the longest 50-free runs by an England opener
but that century today his seventh test 100
the joint second fastest test hundred by an England opener
and of the 11 fastest hundreds by England openers
Ben Duckett has seven so all the seven of his test hundreds
have been in the top 11 fastest by England openers
as Jacob Bethel mentioned his first innings runs
he scored more first innings runs in this match
than in his previous eight.
He had 70 runs in his first eight tests in first innings.
Had a lot of success in second innings,
but it was a curiosity.
They don't really have any sort of explanation.
I think it was just a little quirk,
but it finds 74, not out today.
Also, he only had 40 runs in his first three home test matches
had the one against India at the Oval last year
in the first two this summer.
So, you know, a couple of welcome stats consigned to the first two.
the bin for Bethel in that innings.
And just to finish on that really curious New Zealand innings, 317 for the first wicket,
and then 121 for the remaining nine partnerships.
So 72.4% of New Zealand's runs were scored by that opening stand.
And in the entire history of test cricket, out of all the times, teams have scored 400 and being bowled out.
That's the seventh highest proportion scored by one.
partnership. So yeah, very, very curious
innings from New Zealand. And as you said, testament to
the endurance and skill of England's bowlers led by Stokes.
Well, thanks very much, Andy. In a moment, we'll hear from the Australian
who's been charged with picking the England team.
I'm delighted to welcome to the box. England's new national selector
appointed in May, and it's had a busy start to the job. Marcus North,
former Australian player, of course, we played for numerous
England county sides during his career.
He was Durham's Director of Cricket
for the last eight years. Those years
have flown, Marcus. So I'd love to see you.
Thank you, Jonathan. Welcome along.
I mean, the typical response, not an Australian.
Is that an Australian? No, surely not.
I mean, what has the world come to?
Has there been a few of those?
Oh, of course it is.
Down my part. We've got an Australian selector.
What's going on?
I'm half Jordan, man.
Well, you know, I've had 12 years
living here permanently in the north-east.
My family's northeast.
My kids are grown up.
So, yeah, look, I'm originally from Australia.
Yeah, absolutely play for Australia.
But, you know, I've been incredibly invested in living in this country with my family,
but also invested in the work I've been doing in English cricket,
mainly with Durham in the last eight years.
Well, I did, look, I said you're okay.
I said, look, he is a decent bloke.
So don't worry about it.
So this is, it's an intriguing step, though, isn't it?
I mean to running a county, which you have done for so long,
but then to step up, if it is indeed stepping up to what you're doing now.
I mean, does it feel like a big step up?
Suddenly be involved in international cricket again?
Yeah, I think the county, my eight years at Durham
have given me an incredible amount of experience across a professional game,
which I have no doubt will hold me in good stead,
and that those skills, you know, hopefully,
a lot of them will be transferable in terms of coming into this role.
It is a different role as compared to director of cricket.
And I'm very much aware that we're at the top of the international cricket.
There's a lot of scrutiny.
England is one of the most talked about biggest countries in world cricket.
So it's an absolute privilege and an honour to be in this role.
A bit of tongue and cheek around Australian doing it.
Of course.
We've had Rob Marsh running our academy.
I think those days are long gone, Marcus.
True, true.
But, you know, I do feel this is a step that I'm looking forward to.
I'm only three and a half weeks into post.
But it's something that I, you know, I always, whether it was Durham or anything I've done,
I feel there's such a great opportunity with the England men's side of where we can get to in all formats.
And to actually play an active part in that is something that really excites me.
and I'm really looking forward to the challenges that that lie ahead
and the rewards that will come from that and the ups and downs.
Yes.
So you just applied straight away.
There's no sort of second thoughts about it.
You thought, yeah, I really fancy this.
Yeah, it's one of those ones where obviously, like all of us, you were working in it,
follow the Ashes very closely, you know, obviously hugely interested and passionate in cricket and genet.
And obviously Ashes didn't go down, you know, wasn't as successful as we're all hoping in terms of an England perspective.
and I guess I've been like I said seven and a half years this this role came up
and there was just something inside me that I was kind of interested in it
so I had a few more thoughts around it had a chat to Rob and
entered the process and that process obviously went right to the end
and you know I was given a decision to make and it just felt right
everything just felt right I wasn't looking for anything I was very very happy at Durham
but I guess that's a nice place to be
if things kind of work out that way
so early days yet
but it certainly feels very comfortable
in terms of the decision I've made
and I'm looking forward to those challenges ahead
like I said before
yeah it's touch on the last 10 days
I know you're the selector
so whatever's been going on there
but it's been I mean if you ever thought
English cricket can have a few ups and downs
I guess you're reminded of it over the last 10 days
yeah look it's no question
it's been an eventful start
I guess one thing I can say is that in my role as selector
obviously I'm not involved in those processes as senior management are
but being involved over the last couple of weeks
and just thinking back of having five changes to the 11th.
But it does involve you then doesn't it?
It does and then four changes back into this test match now.
It's been incredibly calm, collaborative, thought out
So in terms of the discussions I'm having with captain, coach, around, you know, selection,
I don't feel like we've been distracted by some of the things that have been going on.
And I think that reflects, we've got good structure and good process,
and hopefully reflects a bit of calmness that I can bring to that conversation as well.
So, you know, we deliberately picked a kind of a larger squad for the series at the start,
wanting to give ourselves different skill sets to make different,
to give us options for each test venue
and what's in front of us in terms of the conditions we're presented.
And one thing I like is that when we were forced to make some changes for the Oval,
we had those personnel in our squad already.
And it was good to see that opportunity was then forwarded to them.
Yes, we brought Henry Crocrum as a bit of a backup with Lolly Robinson
and having a knee injury
and wasn't available for the second test.
But again, when under pressure,
we're kind of sticking to our strategy and our thoughts.
And like I said, I felt there was a calmness around selection,
which was very good.
Yeah.
Hopefully what happened there was kind of a one-off
because it's hard to bring people in,
what, three for a debut and then bid them the next game, isn't it?
I mean, that's tough.
If you're that player, how did you deal with that?
Yeah, look, I think that, I mean,
the history tells us that,
having that amount of players make their debut is very unique.
You know, going on my own lived experiences, making debuts as a big occasion.
To have three do that at the same time was special for them and their families.
Let's not forget, we had Emilio Gaye playing his second game.
And Fisher also coming in after a bit of a break from his debut,
but also playing his second game.
So to have five players against a very seasoned experience,
New Zealand team have two games between five players is, you know, is a big ask.
But again, goes back to the calmness of the environment.
Obviously, Joe stepped in as captain for that test match.
And as much as the result didn't go away, you know, I think those players hopefully
enjoyed that special occasion in front of a full house.
And, you know, they also gives us an opportunity that they may not have had to see them play
a test match.
and they'll be far better for that experience
and they're all going to be very important players for us moving forward
I saw Jordan Cox yesterday and said hey you know
we have a strange experience
I said well I've done it now
it made my debut those nerves have gone forever
so when I get my next chance I'll feel better about it
which actually was a really good way of looking at it
yeah absolutely and I mean speaking to Jordan
he said he didn't have too many nerves
no I do think he's got a lovely confidence about him
He looked very comfortable out there as well.
I know he didn't get necessarily the outcome of making a big score,
but he certainly didn't look out of place.
Right, so how's it working for you?
I remember when Jeff Miller did this job,
I think he might have been the first national selector a long, long time ago.
I mean, he just did thousands of miles all over the motorways.
Have you spoken to him by the way?
He'll give us interesting thoughts on being the national selector.
But that was how it was then.
Is that how it is for you?
I don't think that he had a network of scouts.
I think it really was just Jeff in his car,
in his phylofax and his mobile phone,
and off he would go, going all over the country.
How's it going to work for you?
Look, I think one is that there's a fantastic system in place
and structure in place around, you know,
the whole system of selecting and talent identification.
You know, it's not for just one man or one person,
responsibility to do that. Like I said, we've got a scouting network that's well established
in the game. I'd like to think that my relationships with directors of cricket and coaches
within the county game over the last seven years gives me a fantastic insight and relationships
to have those conversations. We've got a pathway of our young lions, our Lions cricket
moving into the international men's formats.
But in terms of, yes, my role is very much going to be getting around the counties
and watching players of interest, balancing that out with all the information that's brought
in by all the scouts, the conversations that we constantly have, the county inside group
which has been formed.
I had a meeting with them for the first time before selecting our T20 international squad.
So again, some fantastic insight and discussion and debate around players,
getting their perception of what they see as a good player for an England team.
So it kind of helps us remove the danger of us being in a bubble
and having our own thoughts, getting other thoughts,
which kind of helps shape our lens a little bit.
So there's a big structure in place.
And then you've got Ed Barnier, performance director,
we've got David Corder, head of talent ID,
you know we've got Troy Cooley now on board who's a tremendous fast bowling coach
and an unbelievable eye all those guys have an unbelievable eye for talent
you know and that communication is constant you know daily hourly messages going on
phone calls going on so you know it's that is probably the depth that you know
coming from a DOC role into this role I probably didn't really respect the level of
information and people working together which informs the process of selection.
So yeah, I mean, County Cricket is absolutely the key heartbeat of our talent and where that
comes from.
So it's incredibly important.
And for me to maintain a really good relationship and connection with the game is going
to be absolutely vital in my role.
Yeah.
It's interesting scouts you have.
I see Jeff Arnold's on there, a terrific bowler.
You're well into his 70s now, isn't it?
And then you go down to a much younger spectrum as well.
I mean, is that kind of intentional to have a really broad,
broad reach, if you like, of experience in the game?
Yeah, absolutely.
And it's no different to experience as a player or in life or in business
that, you know, Jeff Arnold has seen so many bowlers
and has such an eye for talent.
But also having someone that comes in with a very modern
in terms of recent experience in the game
or as a current coach in the game
might have a slightly different perspective.
So it's there to balance
and make sure that we're capturing all that talent
and all those experiences of shaping
what people see as what they think is a good player
and there's potential to have the attributes
to be international players
or future international players.
So getting that kind of wide perspective is really important.
The big shout, I guess, Mark,
is knowing when to pick somebody, isn't it?
you know, when that individual is actually ready
and getting that call right is the big judgment call, isn't it?
Yeah, it is.
And, look, history says you don't always get it right, you know.
You look at the start of this series.
You know, there was that lot of discussion around the opener
who's going to open the batting.
Emilio Gay has performed fantastically while he's got runs in county cricket.
Did you push it?
You'd have obviously seen a lot of him.
Yeah, I mean, look, he was obviously at Durham.
And last year he made 400s in the first division
and started with 300s this year.
So what I liked about leading into this test series,
that there was a real public debate around
who is going to take that opening position.
That creates noise and creates pressure.
So it's interesting to see how people actually start
to handle that next level of not just making runs for your county
and someone saying to you,
agers, I think you've got potential to be an,
opening batter for England but actually
it's unlikely that shot but that's true
but you know where I'm going in terms of
and Amelia I think has expressed that quite openly
he's refreshingly open and honest in terms
of the way he speaks certainly into the media as well
and he was nearly kind of wanting to put pressure on himself
in terms of the noise around him so that
again gives us a little bit of insight that this guy's
showing us some attributes that when he goes
into the international stage where there is a lot more
scrutiny, TV, crowds, all that kind of pressure that this guy's got the attributes to
handle himself, basically.
You know, to me, there's so many, there's two things, there's talent and there's mentality.
And I think, you know, everyone that plays international cricket or even first class
cricket has got talent.
And if you can be highly talented and have a very high mentality, I think that is a great
attribute to being very successful at international level.
You can have slightly less.
talented players but high mentality you're still going to have a very successful player I think
in international cricket if your mentality is a little bit you know struggling and you've got high
talent that doesn't mean you're going to be good at international cricket because all the other
things all the distractions all the pressures that that go on top is what shapes I think
people that have longevity and long-term success at international level and and identifying that sort
of person it is is the key then isn't it I mean that's where you're depending on people who actually
know them, I guess. Yeah, absolutely. And this is where county cricket is absolutely critical,
because that's, you know, that's where they start and that's where they kind of, the breeding
ground is. And that's why Lions cricket is incredibly important because you're putting
him into different exposure, you're putting the weight of the three lions shirt on them,
you're going to different parts of the world. So you're kind of seeing how they react
in different conditions, how they react in slightly different environment. So again, you're
just capturing their, you know, their mentality, their personality.
and hopefully building an understanding that either helps to validate
that this guy is in the right direction, going the right direction,
to be an international player,
or there's things we need to work on,
or we feel this individual might just not have what it is to be capable of dealing with all those pressures.
I've always felt you need a bit of luck as well.
You know, in your first, I mean, I played at a time when it was a bit of a revolving door.
It was actually really good for county cricket
because you knew if you were playing on a damp day down at Cardiff,
one of Friday.
If you got wickets,
you got some last week,
you've got to, again,
maybe next week,
you could play for England.
And so it was a great incentive.
But the problem was when you did get that chance to play for England,
if you didn't do something immediately,
there was someone else in that revolving door process
who was going to take your place.
And that was very pressurized.
And the number of players that England burnt through in that time
was kind of unacceptable really.
But it was very incentivising for county cricket,
which is quite an interesting situation to,
to be in, isn't it?
I mean, county cricketers, for me,
need to believe they can play for England.
They need to be able to see that as a goal,
but a realistic goal.
And so you'll presumably be working,
is that something that you believe in as well?
Absolutely, and hopefully that
has already been reflected in some of the selections
that have been made in terms of
the test squad with Emilio Gay, who's performed
very well at first class level.
We saw James Rue
has had a fantastic start
to the season. He earned he spotted
into the test squad.
Cox, who's been around the England set up
and probably would have made his debut
several times without terrible luck.
He's been away and hadn't played a match
for two months in the IPL.
Returns, makes a double hundred.
It's about, again, trying to get that link
and reward to performance.
Ideally, we want to be picking players
that when they do play,
and this is where you get timing,
is important and a bit of luck with timing
is he want people coming in and playing for England in form
and that's that you know there's times where that might not always happen
where someone might be informed they get selected
and then they're sitting on the bench waiting for opportunity
and that's another reason why we've been very proactive
in the recent weeks around if players are not playing
let's get them back playing county cricket
and I think every player that hasn't been in the 11
has been back playing first-class cricket
being one way back to the debut.
Exactly.
And we've got,
there's a T20 series starting on Wednesday next week.
And we've got players going back to play for their counties in the blast.
So it's important that we keep giving them the opportunity to perform.
And to keep ticking over.
I think it's a tough place as a player to kind of get rewarded and selected.
And then then be asked to perform.
And you might not have batted or bold, you know, for a best part of three or four weeks.
Well, when Jacob Bethel springs to mind,
and that's my son-man-X pointed away.
How do you stand with his situation at the moment
where he's in the IPL, play a couple of games, I think, didn't he?
Whereas from an England perspective, you want him.
Tavito's a young lad with a lot of talent,
think, oh, you know, from a supporters' perspective or whatever,
you think, oh, surely he'd be better off.
Playing for Warwickshire, getting some runs,
getting a red ball game into it.
How do you handle that?
Well, what people need to really understand is that
when players go and get drafted or get in the IPL
and there's that commitment to play in the IPL,
there's a commitment, unless you're injured,
there's a commitment to fulfil your contract.
You have to be there.
You have to be there.
So, you know, for us, we don't have an option
to pull the player back
unless there's a sustained injury.
You know, and we've seen the likes of Brooke and others
that if they do pull themselves out,
I think it's a three-year-back.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, so, you know, there's that.
So there's an understanding that that's the case.
So they're not always going to get at an ideal situation.
In terms of Beth, obviously he was out there
and he played the back end of the tournament.
And he came over and he's incumbent in the side
and he's playing test cricket.
You look back and go, you could argue,
is that the best preparation or not?
I've got to know Beth a little bit.
And I think there's one guy there that,
I can understand this full trust in terms of his professionalism.
As a young man, he's well mature above his years.
Right.
I mean, he's very young, isn't he?
He is.
And, you know, he's out there with an eye on the IPL
because that's what he's playing for at the moment, or at that point,
but very much with the eye of that first test match.
And I saw a guy come over,
and I would not have been able to tell
if he had not been playing Red Ball or not.
You know, so I think that's credit to Beth,
but also understanding,
you're never going to get an ideal situation.
at times of the IPL,
we're in the northern hemisphere,
not many other countries have to deal with it.
Do you think that young players are as motivated to play test cricket now,
or does the IPL kind of give them another option, if you like?
And I'm thinking particularly those who, not Bethel actually,
because he's clearly a standout and he's got extraordinary talent,
but those who might be slightly doubting whether they will,
I go back to that incentivisation again,
if they're not going to play for England,
actually they're going to go off and go play IPLs.
Is there a sense of that as well in county cricket
that's called the next little level down?
They're the ones who've got the difficult decision to make.
Well, I can answer that question
in terms of my experiences at Durham
dealing with county players on a daily basis.
There's not a player at Durham
that wouldn't want to be playing test cricket for England.
The difference between when I played
and obviously when you played,
we didn't have those options
to go and play in franchise or IPL cricket.
And also, let's not forget that players are getting opportunity
to play in franchise.
They're getting better.
They're getting exposed to different types of levels of players.
They're interacting and playing with world-class players,
albeit in a slightly different format.
But actually, they're improving.
You know, they're developing as players and as individuals.
I haven't seen any evidence that people are choosing
to be less worried about test cricket
and more worried about IPA.
I think the younger player now is open to both
and we'll make a decision when that opportunity presents itself.
But we've got players that are, you know, like a Beth,
who we'll play a lot of IPL, there's no doubt about it.
But it's so committed to test cricket and international cricket.
And we've seen that around the world with other countries
that, you know, that relationship can coexist.
Yeah, well, that's reassuring.
First division, second division, does that make a difference to you?
as far as selecting players is concerned?
No, I think it, you know, without question,
I feel that first division, again, going back,
and I don't mean to keep harping back,
but we were in the first division last year
and we got relegated and, you know,
the squad is a strong squad and is dominating second division.
There's no doubt that the depth in those first division teams
has greater depth,
and the standard is probably a little bit tougher
in terms of, you know, that competitive,
nature and skill level.
But it goes back down to, again, making runs, what's in front of your first and second
division, making runs, then how are you making those runs, who you're making them against,
what kind of scenarios in the game.
Those players are normally going to be given some exposure in Lions cricket.
So then you're starting to, again, go back to my previous point of building up that knowledge
bank of the individual, the skill set, the mentality.
And that's where you kind of build that overall kind of resuscary.
may have a player that then you would pick from.
But no, I think we've picked, you know,
players from second and first division to play in this test series.
Just last couple of thoughts.
I mean, there was a criticism of Brendan McCullum, for instance,
about not being interested in county cricket and being a disconnect.
Is that something that you've experienced?
And is that something that you, in your role now,
are looking to try and put right?
I think there's two things.
I made a point before around the structure that's in place.
It's not for one man, right?
So there's a process and structure that's in place that support selection.
Pretty much the first 24 hours that I got the role, I rang and spoke to Brendan, and he was in New Zealand.
And he is, he is, there's a perception that he's out of sight, out of mine and doesn't care.
That is, that's absolutely the opposite.
And I was speaking to Stephen Finn before I came on before and about my role and going into the environment.
I've never been in the environment.
So to me, my perception of the environment is very much listening to you on commentary
or reading the articles online, etc.
So to actually go in, it's, you know, I was shaped with what I thought it might be
because that's what I've read.
But my phone call with Brennan McCullum,
is depth and knowledge of players around,
that were options for us, the young players that were involved in the lines,
players that were making scores in counterc cricket.
He's aware of all this, you know.
So I think it's, for me, my immediate reaction was,
actually maybe some of this criticism has been a bit unfair and unjust, really.
Welcome to English cricket.
Yeah, maybe so.
But again, my experience has been Brendan initially in the last three or four weeks,
you know, in terms of this selection role,
has been incredibly positive, collaborative.
I know that there's been these words of challenging conversations, etc.
You know, they're kind of buzzwords at the moment.
It's very much a collaborative, good debate, good discussion.
I feel part of my role and responsibility is to make sure that a lot of selections are aligned with strategy
and not kind of going, having a little bit of flex,
but making sure that each decision we have has a reason behind it,
enable us to make better decisions.
And reflects their strategy.
Exactly.
You see, you can't mould the strategy of the England team as such.
you are given a strategy
and then you select players
to suit that. Yeah, to it. Yeah, absolutely.
And I think through
time and relationships and conversation,
you know, hopefully my perspective
on the game
in general, for my
experiences and I guess my knowledge
that hopefully
Brendan might, you know, sooner
rather than Ladis and actually Marcus gives us great
insight is getting us looking at things slightly
differently or looking at that player
slightly differently. You know, so, you know,
I came into this role to have a real positive influence.
I see there's a great opportunity, like I said before,
with this men's side in all three formats to where we can get to.
And to have that opportunity to influence that is the real kind of fire
that maybe really want to take this job on.
I can feel your enthusiasm, Marcus.
Good luck with it.
Thanks, sir.
I do hope it goes well.
We'll be forward to seeing what teams you're picking into Australia next summer.
We'll judge what you're up to.
It's lovely to see. Thanks to come back to see.
Thank you very much.
And good luck. Marcus North.
The TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live.
Well, that was Marcus North, England's national selector, speaking to Jonathan Agnew.
You can watch highlights on today at the test, on the eye player,
and we'll be back for the third day from 10 a.m. Saturday morning on BBC Sounds,
and we'll have another podcast after that.
Five Lights Sports.
My favourite World Cup moment, it's the first World Cup I properly remember watching.
78, the ticker tape, Mario Kempes,
Ari Hahn's scoring goals from miles out,
and always one of my favourite World Cup moments,
Archie Gemmell's great goal for Scotland against the Dutch.
What makes the World Cup such a special tournament
is the atmosphere, the colour,
it is a meeting of the nations,
and of people who love football.
The People World Cup 2026.
Listen on BBC Sounds.
He's widely recognised as one of the greatest footballers in history.
He's won the prestigious.
Ballandeur award five times.
He's the all-time leading goal scorer in professional football.
And according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index,
he's the first active footballer in history to achieve billionaire status.
Guess who we're talking about yet?
That's right. Good Bad Billionaire is exploring the life and fortune of football icon
Cristiano Ronaldo.
That's Good Bad Billionaire from the BBC World Service.
Listen now, wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
