Test Match Special - Leading England's Attack: Josh Tongue looks ahead after Ashes
Episode Date: May 27, 2026Mark Chapman is alongside former England wicketkeeper Matt Prior, former England fast bowler Steven Finn and the BBC’s cricket correspondent Stephan Shemilt as they talk to Josh Tongue about his Eng...land career and discuss England's new National Selector.We also hear from England Women's Head Coach Charlotte Edwards in build up to the T20 World Cup and talk to Durham Coach Dani Hazell who won the competition in 2017.Timecodes: Reflecting on the Ashes: 1:30 Does Josh Tongue want to lead England attack?: 08:00 England's self inflicted defeats: 15:50 Process behind finding new National Selector: 17:30 Does the new Selector need to be English? 30:00 Support for Zak Crawley: 34:50 Women's T20 World Cup 37:45 Charlotte Edwards speaking to Henry Moeran: 38:30 Durham Coach Dani Hazell: 41:00 Does success of other England Women's National teams add to T20 Pressure?: 45:00
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to the TMS podcast from BBC Radio 5 Live.
England's men's test summer begins next week.
New Zealand are the opponent at Lords,
and we've got a women's T20 World Cup on the horizon.
England beat New Zealand yesterday.
So they're the two big focuses of the next hour.
Matt Pryor and Stephen Finn, two former England players are with us,
as is the BBC's cricket correspondent, Stefan Schemel.
And I'm delighted to say as well.
from the men's camp.
England bowler, Josh Tongue joins us as well.
So I'll go come straight to you, Josh.
I can't be bothered with Finney or Matt or Stefan.
We'll come straight to you.
They can talk.
They've got plenty of time to talk.
How would you describe the overall feeling within the squad and the camp
after, you know, difficult times?
Yeah, it was obviously a difficult time in the ashes.
Obviously, a bit of a new look squad now.
But, yeah, obviously, we got to Luffrey yesterday, got around everyone,
and everyone's coming to the Cambe Excited.
When you all meet up again, do you immediately go into meetings,
or is it a sort of more relaxed start?
Yeah, it's fairly relaxed, just seeing everyone having a cough here and there.
First day, it was a bit of fitness testing to start.
So, yeah, I was on the bike.
Well, I didn't really enjoy the bike that much.
Some of the lads were running around the track.
and then some strength testing
but yeah it's fairly relaxed at the minute
before the others come in
how do you reflect on
what was obviously a really
disappointing Ash's experience from a
team point of view and overall
but with positives
for yourself because I would have
thought the I know it's a team sport
but the individual
positives have to play a part
in your psychology surely
yeah obviously when we were
going out there we were
hoping to win the ashes.
Obviously, I didn't go out of way.
But, yeah, on a personal note, I was pretty chuffed how I went when I came in at a third test match.
And then obviously, boxing day as well, which I'm always going to remember for the rest of my life,
which was an incredible feeling.
I think of 95,000 people there, family in.
So, yeah, it's, yeah, it was amazing.
How do you feel?
How do you feel?
How's your rhythm feeling this season?
Yeah, it's feeling good.
I'd say
first game
because I was on
restricted overs
against Glamorgan
I just felt like
I was sort of
in and out of spells
but as soon as
that second game came
I went on in the restrictions
so I was able to
sort of get my rhythm
and yeah
I feel like I'm in a good place
physically
I've got through a decent
amount of overs
in the games
that I've played
so yeah
I feel I'm getting there
can I just ask you
I'm not trying to get you
into trouble
with anybody here
but restricted
overs
does it
Does it frustrate you?
I mean, we all understand the reasoning behind it,
but you presumably know your body better than anybody
and what you need.
How much can you feed into the process?
Well, I think it was just due to,
it's obviously been in the World Cup.
I didn't play in that.
I think because my overs were fairly down from the ashes.
So we had to build my overs back up in training,
and I wasn't meant to be playing that Bormor game.
And I said to Kevin Shine at the time,
I feel like I'm ready to play.
So then he obviously had the chat with England
and they said, you can have 25 overs in the game.
And I was like, yeah, that's better than nothing.
I'm not trying to be playing rather than bowling to a mitt.
So it's definitely benefiting me that way.
Because you want to bowl, don't you?
I mean, this is a big discussion we have a lot.
You're aware of discussions that go on.
As a bowler, you want to bowl?
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah, I feel like I get better at each game I play,
just getting that sort of rhythm.
and obviously you can do so many overs and the nets against the batter,
but when you get to the outside in the middle against a different opposition,
it's just completely different, the intensity goes up.
So in that sense, that was good for me to sort of play in that second game
against different different battles.
What are you looking forward to this summer the most, mate, is it slightly new look attack,
isn't it?
And a couple of new faces that you wouldn't have bowled with before.
Having cemented, in my opinion, your spot in the team,
throughout that Ashes series,
what excites you the most about this summer?
I think obviously it's going to be
two amazing series against two good teams.
I want to sort of, if I do get the nod
for that first test match,
I want to try and influence the game as much as I can.
That's what I try to do in the ashes in the winter.
As soon as Stokesy game with the ball,
I tried to impact the game.
And frankly, it works in those games,
and I want to put the team in good positions
to win games of cricket.
So hopefully, if I do get the call,
for that first test at Lord,
so I'm going to try and do exactly the same.
Josh, there's been so much said about the team performance
in the Ashes, of course.
We don't have to go into that now
because we've got you sat here,
as I agree with Finney,
a standout performer for the team,
and congratulations to you for that.
I thought you were brilliant.
The question I have is,
is what personally did you learn from the Ashes?
What went well for you,
and what are you going to take from that
and implement into this summer from a technical perspective, a mental perspective, whatever it may be?
I think one of the biggest things for me was my fitness.
Obviously, it's a lot different bowling in the UK compared to Australia where obviously the
temperature is 40 degrees, especially that Adelaide test.
I was actually over the moon, how my body sort of pulled up after that first day.
And in terms of like how I bowled as well, obviously I've got some top class batters.
out.
Like the likes of Steve Smith.
So I think just having the confidence
that I can get these good batters out
and try not to bowl too hard
and put too much pressure myself.
I'm such a chilled guy and so I try and have fun
as much as I can when I'm on the pitch.
Also, I'm going to have spells where I'm not going to be bowling my best.
But I know if I just hang in there,
I'm going to get a good spell and that's where I'm going to get the wickets for the team.
Josh, you'll have seen all the chat since the ashes
about, I don't know, how the England environment
might change post-Australia.
We know that there's more coaches around the camp
that there has been in Loughborough.
I think there's a chef coming in
before the first test next week.
Does it feel different?
What have you guys spoken about?
Have you noticed, I don't know, a changing approach?
There hasn't been too much chat.
It's been good training to play at Loughborough.
The intensity has been really high.
Obviously, we've got Troy coming now,
who's been amazing with me.
He's been to a few of my games.
he knows shiny really well so they've been speaking quite a lot and I know he's going to help so much
for english cricket obviously he's been with the likes of all the ozies and the indian bowlers as well
so it's it's going to help me definitely and yeah it's it's just good to be back around everyone
back at luffra so when you say he's been amazing for you what what is he yeah i don't think
you want to give all the secrets away before you start to play this somewhere but but what is
he doing with you that is that is tapping into what you need i feel like because i'm such a chilled
guy in terms of my approach to bowling um he's sort of sort of sort of seen that already um not saying
too many technical stuff with me um because obviously i bow past the perpendicular and obviously a bit
of an orthodox position at cruz um so yeah he's he's quite a funny guy as well um to
at Aussie.
So yeah, he's just been very chilled
to me. Even today, we had a double
spell against some of the batters
and he was just stood at the back.
Not saying too much, but obviously
if we needed to ask a question, he was there
for us. There's no
Anderson, there's no broad,
there's no wokes,
you sort of keep talking how
children relaxed you are. Do you want to lead
this attack?
Yeah, 100%. I've always
I've always wanted to play for England.
That was my dream growing up as a kid.
And yeah, I feel like if I try and put good performances in for England when I get caught upon,
that's going to put the team in good stead.
And I bowl for the team.
I don't bowl for myself.
If I do have to do the tricky overs.
If that's going to bumper plans when Stokesy gives me the ball, then I'll do it for the team.
What's that relationship like then with all the other fast bowlers?
Because this isn't years gone by of, you know, three fast bowlers and there we go,
or four fast bowlers and the spinner and there you go.
You know, when you are on tour, you're seen as a group of six or eight or whatever it may be.
You are seen as a pack that has to be rotated given the modern demands of the game.
So do you view yourself as a team or do you view yourself as in competition with each other?
I see it as a team.
we all want to do well.
We all want England to win,
and I'm sure the fans want that as well.
So it's going to go through stages
where people probably need a rest
because obviously how hard it is on the body.
And obviously we've got likes of sunny coming into the squad
who's young and enthusiastic.
And he's fitting really well with the squad.
And obviously Mattie Fisher as well,
who's with us part of the ashes towards the back end
and he's a very good bowler.
So I don't look at it as competition.
I think it's very exciting.
And what would a successful
what's what summer look like for you by the end of it?
I feel like cement in my name in the first 11.
And obviously, we're in a series as well.
And winning games of cricket again for England.
I think that's my main goal.
Thank you very much for giving easy time, Josh.
Go well this summer.
Good to talk to you.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Cheers.
Josh Tongw with us on Five Live cricket.
I still go back for any two.
I mean, I know I shouldn't because there's lots of positive there.
but bowling restrictions driving around the bend.
Yeah, I guess that with your question.
I thought I saw your face going a bit red on the screen there, Cappas,
and that's why.
Yeah, it's a funny one, isn't it?
And actually, he gave a really honest answer,
he said, and I commend him for taking control of his own game
because sometimes it's really easy in that situation to say,
I'll just bowl through to a mitt.
But he said to his coach,
I want to bowl game overs.
and for me as a bowler, the difference between game overs,
and we saw it for England in the ashes, right?
They were underprepared going into that first test.
They didn't have the game overs under their belt,
and that hurt them throughout the early part of that series.
But he said, I have an opportunity here
to make sure that I'm as best prepared for that first test match
as I can possibly be.
And the difference, honestly,
the difference in your soreness,
the difference in your intensity,
everything about it is so different
in a competitive game situation.
I commend him for that.
And yeah, the restrictions are frustrating when you hear it
in the plain light of day.
But I would be the same as Josh.
If I had 25 overs to bowl,
I'd rather do it in a game than not.
How important is it, Matt, to find a leader for this attack?
It's going to be crucial.
It's going to be crucial, as we know,
no Broad, no Anderson,
not even awokes when, you know,
Broad and Anderson weren't there.
He'd sort of step in.
But it is,
exciting time. I think it is. It's an exciting time that you've got to remember when, I remember there
was absolute turmoil when Peter Moore selected Broder Anderson instead of Hogarth and Harmison.
And it was the same conversation. You know, oh, these two young lads coming in. Jimmy Anderson used
to get hammered for his technique. I remember boycott. We used to talk about in the dressing room.
Boyx was all over him. You can't stare at your feet when you're delivering the ball and who is this kid?
He's going to, you know, where's he come from? He's going to go nowhere. And lo and behold.
he becomes one of the greatest, if not the greatest we've ever had.
So watching young fast bowlers come through, like Josh Tongue,
it's an exciting new start, but they have to grab the opportunity.
I thought he was outstanding in Australia.
I mean, he was really one of the, maybe even the only positive.
And let's hope he starts the summer well.
I just think, Finney, on that point about bowling,
we used to how many pre-seasons did we do, right?
and you spend hours, it was interesting.
He said, oh, the first thing they did Lothborough's fitness testing, right?
And you go and lift some weights and do a bit of a run around the track.
But I'll tell you, until you've done your first seven hours in the dirt, again, in the field, bowling, keeping.
It doesn't matter what you do in the gym.
The only thing that prepares you for playing is playing.
And I wonder from a bowling perspective, because certainly from a keeping perspective,
that's what it was.
Is it the same with bowling?
Yeah, absolutely.
And even as far as, so in the next.
I would be someone who felt as though I was running in hard in the nets.
I would always try.
I'd never coast in the nets.
But you wake up the next day, you're a little bit sore.
But then you bowl in a game, and it doesn't matter whether it's a warm-up game.
A test match is another intensity on top of that, clearly.
But a warm-up game, a first-class game.
And I'd find I'd be bursting through my socks.
Like the force through the crease was so much more.
My toes would be bleeding.
You need to build up those calluses on the top of your feet
that you get from bowling lots of overs.
And you're right, Matt, that the only place that you can do that is playing competitively in the middle.
And it's not a feeling that I wish to ever revisit because that first day, you wake up at 5 o'clock in the morning to go to the toilet and you kind of step out of bed, your first step and you're like, okay, that's not too bad.
And then you take your second and you think, I'm not sure I'm making it to the toilet here and you creak your way there.
And it's not a pleasant feeling, but you have to go through it in order to be prepared to play proper cricket.
Yeah. As someone who's 15 years older than you,
let me tell you, that feeling will come back to you at some point.
Damn it.
Yeah, I want to normally, firstly on a nightly basis.
Anyhow, moving on.
Stefan, when you asked him that question about what has changed,
were you expecting things to have changed immediately?
No.
but I think it's the thing
that we're all looking out for
probably starting from next Tuesday
actually when the media goes down to Lord
so England will train on Monday
and we won't be there
then we'll see them from Tuesday
train on Wednesday and the test match starts
on Thursday
but that's all we've spoken about really
isn't it since the ashes of what is going
to be different because
they haven't changed the personnel
they haven't changed the director of cricket
they haven't changed head coach they haven't changed the captain
And actually when the 11 lines up on Thursday morning,
most of the 11 will have been in Australia as well.
They've beefed up the backroom staff.
There's some new coaches that have come in.
Sarah Taylor's come in with a fielding specialism.
Troy Cooley that Josh Tong spoke about,
but we were led to believe that Troy Cooley was coming in any way,
even before the ashes happened.
There's a few other coaches around as well.
But what is it that we're going to see different from England?
What do supporters want to see that lessons have been learned?
Go on, Finney.
What do you want to?
This sounds like a pointed statement.
What do you want to be different?
Because you followed it closer than anyone for the last few years.
I think the main thing is my problem with England is a lot of their problems on and off the field are self-inflicted.
And if you go back to before the ashes, most of their most calamitous defeats came from when they were in position.
of strength going all the way back to Wellington when they lost after enforcing the
follow on. They lost at Edgebaston in the first Ashes test after they declared. They lost at
Lords in the Ashes after Nathan Lyon hobbled off. They lost a test match at the Oval against
Sri Lanka that they should have won against India in that big run chase when Chris Wokes came out
with a dislocated shoulder. When they needed, was it 70 with seven wickets in hand? A lot of those
defeats were self-inflicted. Same again in the ashes in Perth. They were 105 ahead with nine wickets in
hand and they lost. Can England, it's great that they had this reputation of big run chases
in the fourth innings, but the reason they had big for big run chases in the fourth in is because
they conceded a lot of runs anyway. So can they become a team? It's great that they had this
reputation of being able to pull off death-defying run chases and victory from the jurors of
defeats. But sometimes just hammering a team's great, isn't it? Can they can they put those situations to
bed when they get on top.
This is our first five-life cricket since England announced the appointment of former Australian
batsman and Durham Director of Cricket Marcus North as the new national selector.
Now, both Matt and Stephen were involved in this process.
How, first of all, before we go on to the appointment of Marcus North, how thorough
did you both find the process, Matt?
well i i was involved i don't think i went quite as far as finney did um i i had an initial
conversation with rob keith um i spoke to the recruitment guys at the ecb um and that's really i
never put a formal application in um so i'd probably be unfair of me to comment on on how thorough
it was um just just on off the back of those couple of conversations okay stephen
Yeah, well, I clearly didn't get it
because I'm still sat here with you three.
Yeah.
I mean, every cloud and all that.
I know.
I know what a life.
No, look, I, to be honest, in the end,
if I was offered it, I'd have said no
because actually I don't think it's the right time
for me to be doing a job like that.
But I was asked if I'd consider applying
and I have an interesting cricket administration.
I'm involved in it at my home club Middlesex,
and I love the broadcasting.
I genuinely, it's something that I really love doing,
and it would take a lot for me to walk away from that right now.
But yeah, it was something that interested me
because it felt as though this job comes at a time
when the person can make a difference to English cricket.
So I went through the interview process,
and yeah, I felt as though it was thorough.
You were asked about whiteball cricket, test match cricket.
You were quizzed and challenged on the things that you said
and you had to be able to back those up.
So, yeah.
Can I, Steph is going to come in in in a moment,
but can I just ask you what you understood
the most important part of the role to be?
Because the sort of title national selector implies
you pick all the squads, right?
That would be what an implication is of that job title.
But how did you understand the role from the interview process?
Well, I think it's a little bit fluid as to who does the job.
And I think that it's important that it wasn't a role that you had to try and fit a round shape into a square hole.
I don't think it is a job like that.
I think the job has to morph to the person that gets its strengths.
I think clearly this role needs to be a bit more visible and a bit more front-facing
and I think we'll probably see Marcus North explaining more decisions.
But ultimately for me, I think it has to be a collaborative role
because I don't think we're at a stage now in the cycle,
especially with the fact that the coach and the managing director of cricket
have stayed on in their roles.
I don't think it's a time for the selector to come in and completely rip things up.
I think it has to be collaborative and I think that the role has to challenge,
but also give space for everyone to have a voice in the room.
But yeah, I didn't get as far as understanding how a selection meeting would work
if you were to be the head selector,
but certainly my feeling was that it should be a collaborative role.
It was explained.
Sorry, just quickly, it was explained to me that there wasn't actually a role description per se.
It was more about finding the right person and then fitting the role around the person,
which was slightly confusing, from honest.
The questions I had were simply, you know, is this role going to just be another tip box
or is this person going to be able to sit there and challenge and actually have a genuine
opportunity to influence English cricket in a positive way,
i.e., if the coaching captain wants a certain squad,
can you sit there and go, I don't agree with this?
Have we looked at this person, that person, the next person?
What are the actual standards required to be selectable as a batsman, for instance?
Do you have to average over 30 per se?
Or hopefully more like 50, right?
Like what is actually the criteria for selection?
Are those conversations going to be had?
Is that what this person is going to do and bring to the role?
And I didn't really get an answer if I'm honest.
As I said, I didn't get very far in the process.
But it felt very much like they were sort of throwing the net out to see what options they had.
I think there were a few.
Finney probably knows more than me.
but yeah, there wasn't a role description.
I think just on the back of what Matt's saying there
in terms of trying to find the right person,
and I think a few of us,
and I don't know if you were the same for any
when you were going through the process,
I was under the impression that the person who would get this job
was going to become the chairman of selectors
as we knew it in the past.
And I don't think that's the case now,
and it's interesting to see some of the wording
that the ECB used when they announced Marcus North
as the new national selector.
I'll just pick a couple of lines out.
It said, in his new role,
he will contribute to the selection
of all England men squads.
And then later on,
as national selector,
North will work collaboratively
on selection matters.
So as it's been explained to me,
is that Marcus North
is not necessarily a chairman of selectors,
as we may have understood it,
in years gone by.
I think it's much more a case
of an equal voice on that selection committee.
But also in the case of what Matt is saying
in terms of finding the right,
person. I thought a lot about this through the process of England going through it.
What makes a good selector? What is it? From Finney, from your point of view of someone who's
applied for the job and from Matt as a player who played in a really successful England team
and a lot of that time, particularly when Matt, when England would be coming the number one side
in the world, players seem to come in and hit the ground running a lot, which meant they were
chosen correctly. But in all the criteria that you think of of jobs that go into elite sport,
I don't know, a good selector, I don't know what that is.
It feels a bit hard to define how someone would be good at that job.
Yeah, look, I think that for me, I think the major part of the job.
I think generally in the test team, there's probably two or three slots up for grabs at any one time.
Clearly, the opener and the spin position were the big ones and the fast bowling a little bit,
but more the opener and the spin position.
I think the big role is finding the next generation of players
and nurturing them and making sure that they're as best prepared as possible
that when they come into the first team,
that they have the attributes and the mentality
to be able to deal with international cricket.
I think that is one of the major and main parts of the role.
And then I think contributing to, as Matt said, challenging decisions.
I don't think you're there to override decisions.
that's not how I would interpret the job.
I think you're there to challenge
and provide checks and balances
for when decision and selection calls are made.
It still is.
It still is
you know, out on a limb,
isn't it, cricket or this system
compared to any of our other
major sports.
You know, nobody
challenges Thomas Tuchel's World Cup selection.
Nobody challenges
Steve Borthwell, they may challenge him,
but I mean, you know, he picks who he wants.
Same with Steve Bortho at the Rugby Union
or Sean Wayne when he was in charge of England
rugby league he isn't anymore.
It does feel like an over-complicated system, doesn't it, Matt?
I think potentially, and I completely,
I take what you're saying.
But I think this word challenge is a really important
one right now where we've obviously seen a coaching captain get autonomy around not just the team
but also the culture by which they're going to play now that's always going to be in the
coaching captain always going to be in charge of that within the dressing room but but with
young players coming in I think that it's very difficult for the England coach to be out so
one thing I would add to what the selector needs to do and what makes a good selector
is they've got to watch a lot of cricket.
They've got to be out the cricket grounds.
And you know what?
Not cricket that's being streamed to your phone.
You need to be at the cricket ground because you need to see how players walk.
You need to see how they move.
You need to see how do they walk into a stressful situation and make good decisions?
Do they show intent?
Do they not?
There's certain things you pick up life that you can't pick up through,
through a stream feed.
So the selector, and that's very difficult for an England coach.
And I know McCollum's, you know, pop in it because he's not in the country and he should be here
and he should be watching.
But the reality is he has to coach the England cricket team and he has to get those 11 players
right to go and win the first test match of the summer.
That's where I think you do need the support within the leadership group of which a selector
would be one of those people because their role is to be the person that is out there
talking to the directors of cricket,
talking to the coaches,
talking to everyone that knows, right,
who are the young players coming through,
who's impressed you,
who should I go and watch,
who should I go and see?
And then actually physically be there,
watching these guys perform
so that they can come with,
not a guesswork,
you know,
not a bit of guesswork and a stat pack
because the stats are all great, fine,
but they've actually been there,
they've seen the players,
they've spoken to the players,
and they can give a really good assessment
of is this guy,
ready to play test cricket because the step up is huge.
You know, from first class cricket,
and that's not putting first class cricket down in any way, shape, or form.
But the step up from first class cricket in England to test cricket is a big step.
So I think the selectors' big role is to, or one of their important,
or key parts of the role, is to make sure that they've assessed players that are ready to make
that step up.
I think we could probably fill a whole show on how cricket is.
probably 20 years behind some other sports in terms of high performance.
And, you know, when I was mentioning that the chef coming in to the England team next week to Josh Tong,
I think probably a lot of League 1 football clubs and even League 2 football clubs have probably got their own at the minute.
But in terms of when you're talking about the selection side of it, Mark, there's just a practical element of it, isn't there?
For Thomas Tuchel, he can go and watch four Premier League matches in a weekend.
and the England football team might meet up three times before Christmas and twice after Christmas.
He's got all that time to go and watch footballers play.
And as Matt said, there's been some debate over whether Brendan McCullum should have been in this country in the early part of the season.
But in defence of him, even if he was here, there's just not enough hours in the day for him to get around and see everyone.
And if there was a player that broke their finger during the first test match, he would have been with the England team.
necessarily have had that bank of knowledge or been able to go and watch someone else in terms
of a replacement and England aren't on their own and having a selection panel every other country
does it and a couple of years ago when Chris Silverwood was given the role of head coach and
basically sole selector the Supremo if you will it just didn't work they've got to have that
support around them because there's not enough time for the coaches to get around and see all the
players so if it's about support if it's about facilitating if it's about talking to people
people and watching people. Does nationality matter, Stephen? In my opinion, no, I don't think
it does. I think it has to be someone who has sound cricket knowledge, someone who can spot a
player and you hear cricket former players and people say, can you spot a player? It is a massive
skill to be able to sit there and watch a player and say, he's going to be good. He's got what it
takes or looks to have got what it takes to be good. And I'm not sure your nationality.
that really matters.
And I think,
are we not going to support England this summer in the football World Cup
because Thomas Tuchel is the manager?
No, I'll still be there in my England shirt.
Although it's got John Stones on the back, so hopefully it gets a game.
But I don't think it matters, no.
Have you ended up with the John Stones, England?
Great footballer.
Well, Chappas, look, I'm six foot eight.
I played centreback.
I like receiving the ball to my feet and passing it sideways.
I could spot a long ball over the top.
He's my man.
Good. Darren, Darren Goff said, Matt, they're saying they're trying to bring England cricket and county cricket closer together. I don't think they are. We've got a Kiwi coach. We've now got an Australian selector. I don't think that that's brought the game closer to the county game at all. I do think there's a big, big repair job there. Is that fair or unfair?
Well, I kind of agree with, I agree with Finney in regards to the fact that, okay, Marcus Snorty.
is Australian. Fine. Get that.
And that's, that's, that's quite frustrating.
But it's frustrating because
it would be brilliant
to look at
English past players, players, whatever it may
be for that role.
Absolutely. And that would be,
that would be the perfect situation. But ultimately
you need the best man for the
job. And
Marcus North has been involved in County
Cricket for a long time now.
He knows County Cricket very, very
well. He knows everyone involved in
County Cricket very, very well.
He's got a great reputation, I believe, in county cricket.
He's trusted.
And therefore, I don't, I take the point, and I heard, you know, what Goffy had to say,
and Michael Bourne as well about, you know, pumping up our own and actually getting our own,
giving our own the coaching job and the selector's role and everything else.
I get it entirely.
But first and foremost, you need the best man for the job.
and when England go and win
every test this summer
we won't be complaining
but that's what it is
performance industry isn't it
I mean you balance out the fact
that he is Australian
Stefan with the fact that he's played for
a third of the first class counties
I mean he's
and he's been around
he's been around cricket in this country
for over 20 years
yeah not only six first class counties
his wife is English
before he worked at Durham
he worked at South Northumberland
Cricket Club
so he's involving the grassroots
of the game in this country
then he went to Durham
he's been there for eight years
and so Matt's right
his knowledge of the game
in this country
will be second to none
I think it's more just the case
of the disappointment
that no one
homegrown
has been deemed to have the skills
to do the job
and I suppose if you flip it
on its head
can you imagine Australia giving this job to an Englishman
and having allowed an Englishman to develop in their system in that way
to get to the point where they would give that person the skills
that they would become the most qualified person to become the Australian national selector
and I don't think they would.
Yeah, fair.
But I think he's the right person for the job from what I understand of him.
I think it's also important, not important.
I think it's a good quality to have not found,
like he was obviously a magnificent player,
Test Match 100, Test Match Fyfer,
and played for Australia.
But I don't get the impression,
he wasn't a superstar player.
And I think sometimes those guys who found it harder at times in their career
have a better understanding of the nuances of getting to the top level
and wanting and trying to staying there,
stay there and have a better understanding of that sometimes.
That doesn't mean to say your champion players can't hold these roles
or shouldn't ever hold these roles.
But with Marcus North, when you hear him speak
and you hear about how he conducts himself,
you feel as though he'll handle those conversations
and keeping players in the loop and things like that well,
which is, again, the communication element of this job for me
is something that's really important as well
because you want people to have morale.
You want people playing domestic cricket
to believe that they can play for England
because that motivates everyone to lift the standard in domestic cricket.
You want the guys who get left out,
and there's a couple of guys who've been left out for this series,
aren't there, in Pope and Crawley.
You want them to believe that they can make it back
so that they still want to try their hardest to get there.
And I think that the communication side of this job
is something that Marcus North will do really well.
And actually, just on that,
that support for someone like Crawley
feels actually quite important at the moment
because he's struggling.
Matt, I know he hit a 75 for Kent in the blast yesterday,
but County Championship, he's struggled.
A difficult winter and not in the England squad.
It's hard, I would imagine, when you are left out
and back playing county cricket.
I mean, it's really tough.
It's really tough.
Unfortunately, Vinnie and I have both been there.
We've experienced it.
And the way I try and sum it up is, you know,
as a kid growing up,
If your greatest dream is to play cricket for England,
then your worst nightmare is to be dropped by England.
Because it's almost worse than having got there in the, you know,
not got there in the first place.
You know, you've been there, you've done it, you've had the opportunity.
And then you've been sort of, yeah, thank you.
We've seen enough off you go again.
So you go to some pretty dark places.
And have to do some quite a lot of soul searching to come back again.
So, Zach, you know, will have had a really tough start to this summer.
And, you know, you come back and it's typical with a couple of bad decisions, you know,
an inside edge not picked up, giving out LBW,
suddenly a great ball that nips back and clips the top of off.
And you're thinking, oh, I'm like, give me a chance.
You know, when the game's on top of you, sometimes it just doesn't, it doesn't let you go.
And actually, the best thing that can happen is that you get dropped
because it takes you out of the limelight for a period of time and it allows,
you to just go back to basics,
go work on the things that you need to do,
away from everyone watching you,
and come back stronger.
Because the one thing, there is no doubt,
Zach Crawley is a very, very talented player.
He's a very talented cricketer.
He just has to go and work on a few very obvious
technical issues with his batting.
And I don't think the door shut for him in any way, shape or form.
It would just be, this will be the greatest challenge of his career.
And if he can come through this,
he'll end up coming back and playing a number of more test matches.
I don't doubt it.
And he'll have a far more successful time of it as well.
I also don't doubt that.
But, and it's a big but, can he dust himself down and go again?
And what's his motivation for that?
Particularly with franchise stuff all around us and the ability to go in and, you know,
quite a lot of money sort of having a slog four weeks here and, you know,
four weeks in the Caribbean, a couple of weeks in South Africa.
and, you know, it's pretty tempting
when you've absolutely cocked it for a few months.
Certainly is.
You're listening to the TMS podcast
from BBC Radio 5 Live.
Mark Pryor, Stephen Schemort with us.
The men's international summer,
getting underway against New Zealand next Thursday at Lords.
The women have a home T20 World Cup to look forward to.
That gets underway in just over two weeks.
Time. They continued their preparations
with a seven-wicket win against the World Cup.
the World Champions New Zealand yesterday, bowling them out for just 81 to seal a 2-1 series win.
Here's Charlotte Edwards.
You know, it's been a good series.
I think we've been put in a few different situations.
And I think we've learned a lot.
And I was just really, really pleased with how the players sort of bounce back today.
I think we spoke about a few things after the game the other day.
And I think sometimes it's good that you get those kind of games where we were put under the pump by a very, you know, a world-class player.
And we reacted and we've come back with plans.
and it's worked really well for us today.
A criticism of England previously is when put under pressure, they seem to wilt.
Was that a bit of a worry for you during that game,
and what did you do between matches to try and just ensure that that doesn't happen
should somebody like Sophie Devine get going?
Well, they had a day off yesterday in Brighton, so that's the trick, I think.
I think we had a good meeting around the game about what we've learned from it.
I think we're making improvements the whole time.
and the girls are responding really well
to all the stuff we're throwing at them
around the, you know, we've got a three spin group
today and yeah, I'm just really proud of them
because, you know, you have to show a bit of character
today to come back when, you know,
when you have a team 11 for four and you lose the game,
it was quite hard the other night.
It was a sad dressing room, but they picked themselves up
and, you know, putting that, I think,
one of the best performances in my time as coach,
certainly from a bowling point of view.
A word on what you think is your best 11.
Do you know that in your mind?
I absolutely don't at the moment.
I think what players are doing is putting their hand up all the time.
There's certainly different combinations that we want to look at.
We're obviously now going into the India series,
so we'll have a couple of days off and we'll reassess.
But yeah, I'm not 100% sure.
Probably more sure of the bowling.
But, you know, I guess the batters are, you know,
giving us a few headaches, which you want.
You know, you want people wanting to put the hands up.
So, yeah, we'll wait and see.
And, yeah, like I say, get back together in Chelmsford
and take on, you know, the world champions in 50 over cricket.
Is this the strongest England squad there's been heading into a World Cup?
I think there's been some pretty strong ones going in.
I think we're a great squad.
We've got good depth.
I think what we have got now is options.
And I think every 15 of our players can play in the 11.
And I think that's the situation I wanted to be in coming into this role.
So I'm really pleased.
And they keep pushing each other to be better.
And that's all you can ask.
And just finally, looking ahead to that India series,
Danny White Hodge comes back into contention.
Still no gnats of a brunt though.
Does that make things challenging going into a World Cup?
No, I think if there's any person in world cricket,
you don't mind having probably the lack of cricket she's had.
It's nat.
We keep forgetting today.
We were played without three of them.
And Lauren Bell, you know, we gave her arrest today.
So that's been the most pleasing thing is that we've got this depth in our squad now.
And we've just beaten the world champion.
So, yeah, really, really chuffed.
England coach Charlotte Edwards with Henry Moran.
and Stephen still with us.
Danny Hazel, Durham coached,
part of the England squad who won the 50-over World Cup in 2017 with us as well.
Did you feel extra pressure on a home tournament back then, Danny?
And will that be the case for these players here?
Yeah, I think there is naturally a bit more pressure for a homework cup.
I think the game's got a lot bigger now in terms of social media
and the interest from around is a lot more now.
But as Charlotte says, I think they've put themselves a really good position.
I think the challenge of India coming in the next kind of few days
is going to put a real indicator of probably where they are heading into that World Cup.
The New Zealand series, they've had the chance to kind of look at a few more players.
So I think that's been really good for them to be able to have that.
But I think these next few games get India going to be a bit more of an indicator
of where England are heading into the World Cup.
So you don't judge a huge amount then from what they've done in this New Zealand series?
I think, you know, it's the first few games of the English Summit internationally.
I think what's been really good this year is we've seen a lot more England players playing domestically.
Obviously, you know, with my background being involved with Durham.
It's been really good to see these players be involved.
But I think, you know, in New Zealand, I think Sophie Devine has been a massive standout for them.
I mean, the few players that probably haven't quite hit the ground.
running for them.
But I think India is going to be that bit more of that test
hanging into the World Cup.
I'll bring Matt in here,
and I'll be steaming the step here as well,
but when Charlotte Edda says she doesn't know
what her strongest team is yet,
I would take that as a positive.
Would you as a former player, Matt?
Yeah, definitely.
I mean, from a coach's perspective,
it's exactly what you want.
You want to have, you know, a broad selection.
You want people knocking on the door,
kicking the door down.
saying, I need to be, you know, pick me, I should be in that starting 11.
Absolutely.
I think that then flipped as you get closer to the tournament where you do want actually some,
you know, real clarity on what your starting 11 wants to be,
purely because you want each individual to know what their role is
and what their expectation is for that role going into a tournament.
And if you can have that clarity, you get some wins under your belt,
then that stands you in good stead.
this stage right now, you know, having a number of people knocking on the door is only a good
thing for England.
When you have as well, Danny, if you've got 12 of this squad who were knocked out in the group
stages in 2024, when you look at those numbers, they need to, those 12 need to channel the
disappointment of what happened back then, but it also indicates that Charlotte has managed to
refresh it a bit.
Yeah, I mean, there's two ways of looking at it, isn't it?
You can either dwell on what's happened or you can use it as fuel.
You know, knowing that environment and a few of them players, I'm sure they will use that as fuel.
If you can't get yourself up for a home World Cup, what can you get yourself up for?
So I think it's going to be a challenge.
But equally, I think, you know, there is quite a lot of pressure in terms of, you know, the rugby, the football as well, winning home events.
so that's obviously going to be a factor.
But I think if ever a team is pushed on from what's happened previously,
it's going to be there.
And I'm sure as to get closer and closer, Charlotte would know exactly, you know,
the 11 that she wants to play.
I think Nat Siverr is a big factor in that in terms of the injury that she's potentially carrying
and how long that's going to go on for.
But like Charlotte says, she's somebody who, you know, has a lot of international experience behind her.
So I think that the excitement of a home world cup will put them in a really good stead.
Do you think the success of the other England national women's teams does add to the pressure?
Potentially, I think, you know, it was built up a lot.
I really enjoyed watching the women's and the Euros and obviously the World Cup,
the rugby that we've just had.
So I think it does play a small factor, but I think you've also got to be really focused on.
what you're doing it can't bring you down it's only got to kind of motivate you to
to want to be the best that you can be and put in the best performances and sometimes being your
best might not always end up winning the tournament but i think it's making sure that you put yourself
in the best position to be able to do that tell you what stephen they've looked out with the groups
haven't they oh they're really i was looking at this earlier on actually i've trying to work out
how they managed to end up in the group that they're in and i couldn't work it out
to be honest, but England, they're in group B,
and they've managed to avoid, therefore,
Australia, India and South Africa.
In England's group,
are Ireland, New Zealand, who are the defending champions,
but England have just beaten them in a three-match series,
Scotland, Sri Lanka and the West Indies.
At the last World Cup, England didn't make it out of the group.
It would be a calamity if they don't make the last four from that group.
I mean, that other group,
with Australia and India and South Africa,
Africa in, is incredibly competitive, Danny.
Yeah, that's a brutal group, isn't that?
I think, yeah, I think naturally, if you're maybe looking on paper,
probably the winners look like they're from that group.
I think, you know, Australia have historically been very strong.
India, especially, just winning the 50 World Cup as well.
South Africa kept going from strength to strength.
So, yeah, on paper it would look like England they've got themselves, you know,
a more comfortable group.
But there's no hiding away from that.
So I think, you know, does that pile a little bit more pressure on?
Are you, should you be getting the semifinals?
Are you, you know, it's the element of that as well.
But I think, you know, New Zealand in there defending champions
and the West Indies on their day can beat anybody.
Stephen, with Nat Siverbrant, and who hasn't played a part this summer,
she has this calf injury, a calf tear,
so she isn't going to be involved in the India series.
You heard Charlotte there say
If there's one cricketer in the world
You're not going to mind not playing too much cricket
Coming into it
Then it would be civil brunt
And yet at the same time
They're going to desperately need her fit
Aren't they?
I mean that she could make the difference
Well more than likely
Will make the difference between winning or not
Yeah and also I think more than her cricket skills
I think her cricket skills will be fine regardless
I think she's played enough
And he's experienced and is the best
player in the world, I think.
So I don't think that's going to be a problem.
But as the captain of the team going into a tournament and as a player playing underneath
that captain to have them out there making the decisions because Charlie Dean's gut instinct,
who's been doing the captaincy instead of her, will be different to Nat Siverbrun.
So when they get out there into the middle in a World Cup, the players might be a bit
discombobulated by a change of opinion.
And that can affect you a little bit.
So, you know, you don't want to risk her.
You don't want to put that calf under any undue stress.
But it would be great, I think, for the team and the tactics and morale
to see her play before the tournament.
But if she can't, then so be it.
But the captain, the leadership points, is valid, Danny,
particularly when we saw in previous incarnations,
when Heather Knight wasn't on the field, how it crumbled.
Yeah, and I think, you know, Nat's built a bit more of a bank of execution.
since the early days of captaincy.
But you're right, you get used to somebody in how they lead.
And then, you know, how somebody else comes on in their decisions.
You can kind of be in the field and preempting kind of what direction you think the game is going in
and having, you know, two different people following them in various different games.
It is quite challenging.
But like you say, I think she's got very such a bank of experience now in terms of our captaincy.
it's only going to kind of
and she's been around for a long time
I think the girls are equally understanding
of how she thinks, how she operates
and once you kind of get into them
sorts of roles as a player
you're able to kind of predict
sort of where the game is going
and how you want to carry yourself.
Do you know how the build up to this is going
Stefan in what is an incredibly
competitive sporting summer?
In terms of for England?
Yeah, no, no, in terms of the tournament.
Yeah, in terms of the tournament.
Well, they've sold more tickets for this World Cup than any other previous T20 World Cup.
They've set themselves the ambitious target of playing all the games at the big test match venues.
So it's going to be interesting to see how those grounds are filled.
So I think we're going to be in a slight odd situation whereby we are going to be told that there is record ticket sales.
But at the same time, we're going to see that some grounds can look empty from time to time.
And sometimes there are going to be double headers.
whereby you might have an 11 o'clock start, say, at Old Trafford,
between two teams that wouldn't necessarily bring a big crowd in.
And then it's followed later on by an Australia versus India,
where it's packed to the rafters.
So I think it's going to be interesting from that point of view.
And I think maybe in the early part of the tournament,
there is going to be a conversation around why are there empty seats,
why have some of these games,
maybe not played at, been played at smaller grounds,
where the same crowd would have made it seem full
and made a better atmosphere.
So that's going to be something that's going to be, we'll need to keep an eye on.
150,000 tickets, I think, was the last number that I heard,
which outstripped the T20 World Cup in Australia in 2020.
And you remember that was the tournament where the final was played at the MCG,
where they nearly sold out the MCG.
Because the assumption, Danny, isn't it, that is that after the 2017 World Cup,
it wasn't built on enough.
As someone still involved in the game, do you go along with that?
assumption?
I think it took a little bit of time to move forward.
I think the domestic game itself has, you know, it went to a regional system and now
it's gone into a county system.
I think it's maybe didn't quite catch the wave at first.
But I think now that you've got the stability more of the county system, if, you know,
if England are to go on to win the World Cup, I think it will catch that wave again.
and it's only going to kick the game forward
should they be able to do that.
How do they
capitalise on it after this
World Cup?
That's very good question. I think that it's probably
more of a marketing area.
I think it's, you know,
it's the ability
for young girls to be able to see the game,
isn't it? Can we get more young girls
involved in the game? Young girls and
boys, I think it's, you know, we shouldn't just look at
as women's cricket, can we keep pushing the game of cricket forward as a whole?
But, you know, as a women's World Cup, it's kind of patch the wave of young girls wanting to be
involved in the game and seeing girls on TV playing cricket and that being normal.
And then you kind of get the filter down towards the county game and into the lower age group systems.
I think, Mark, when it's Heather Knight and Nats of
a brunt I've seen talk about this in terms of whether or not
2017 was capitalised on or not.
The point that they've made is maybe just the systems weren't in place for the
game to grow at that time.
And in terms of the lionesses and the red roses and the success that they've had,
I'd hope that England aren't thinking like that, the players,
because I think if you put yourselves under pressure in that state,
you think, oh, the football team of one of the Euro's and the women,
the rugby team have won a World Cup.
Therefore, we've got to have this moment now.
I don't think that would be particularly a healthy place to be.
The interesting thing from this team is the journey that they've been on.
So we've just talked about the changes that maybe the men have had to implement after a poor ashes.
Think of the place the women were in after their Ashes series 18 months ago when there was accusations of not being as professional as they could be, fitness, dropping catches, all those sorts of things.
Charlotte Edwards comes in.
She's a real stickler for those sorts of things.
So you'd want England just to be at the best they can be to win.
this tournament I think would be a stretch
but you just want them to give the best
account of themselves to show that they
have wrung everything out of their ability
and then in kicking
on well we've got the 100 haven't we
and all the investment that's coming in there
and so much was talked about
the 100 in terms of the men's
game while actually I think the real
interesting part of the money that's coming
into the 100 and the English domestic
game is what could it do for women's cricket
we will end it there
Danny thank you very much for coming on
Stefan as well.
That as well, thank you.
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