Test Match Special - The Art of Captaincy
Episode Date: April 13, 2026Two Ashes winning England captains, Michael Vaughan and Sir Alastair Cook, join Steve Crossman to discuss the art of captaincy in cricket. Leading England makes you one of the most recognisable faces ...in sport, it brings with it all manner of responsibility, scrutiny, joy and despair. But how do you manage different personalities in the dressing room? What marks someone out as a future England captain? What’s it like to be in the spotlight and face scrutiny? How do you cope when it comes to an end? Plus, Ben Stokes leadership and the likely challenges the current England captain will face in his fifth summer as skipper.
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Hello, welcome to the TMS podcast and we've been looking forward to this for a long time.
We're talking about the art of captaincy.
Leading England especially makes you one of the most recognisable faces in sport.
It brings with it all manner of responsibility and scrutiny and joy and probably a little bit of despair.
So for the next hour, we're going to look at how you manage different personalities in the dress.
dressing room, what marks someone out as a future England captain?
How do you cut when it comes to an end?
Michael Vaughn and Sir Alistair Cook both with us. Good evening.
Good evening.
Let's just start here because I can't think of a better place.
Alistair, what makes a great captain?
A captain who wins?
When everything gets out in the wash after all the stuff you talk about
as a captain who wins the big series.
And I think over a course of time, you know, the best captains do that more consistently.
Of course there's a lot of things which go into that.
The fact of captains are you're only as good as the other 10 players
or the other 15 players you've got also in those three or four years
that you are captain.
But ultimately it is about winning.
Yeah, I mean, I agree.
It's not necessarily that you start off as a winner as a captain.
But you have that moment where you kind of, you get the job.
I mean, I can only speak from my own experience that, you know,
getting a job like captain in England.
And even go beyond captain in the main England side,
you know, captain in a Yorkshire 15s or an England under 17s,
you know, fundamentally you set out to try and play well,
but you want to win.
And you only really get that respect from your peers.
You generally get the job because you're respected in the dressing room.
But you get the ultimate respect as a captain when you win games of cricket.
And by the way, I won many games that I had no real impact on.
myself.
I thought you're going to say
new rules,
respect.
No impact,
but people say,
oh,
what a great job
the captain did.
I said,
I didn't really do
much that game.
You know,
put a field of here
or there and made the off
ball and change.
But fundamentally,
cookie's right over a period of time
whenever you get a job,
whatever your team,
your captain in.
It's all about winning
a bit of silverware,
winning the major moments.
And creating that atmosphere
that, you know,
I always think you judge your captain
when it gets hot
and the game gets tight,
can the team?
team play. Do they look scared or do they look like they can just play the moment? And, you know,
the real good captains have a real skill in making sure. It's not a calmness. It's just a control
and a real clarity for what the players have to deliver when the pressure's on. Everybody has
opinions, Alistair, on who the England captain should be, what the England captain should do.
And it'll be interesting to touch on bits of advice that you both got before being England captain.
But I'm also curious as to whether there's anything you wish you'd been told.
before you were England captain,
maybe that you're something you didn't expect,
even having thought about it and probably dreamed about it.
Well, actually, I do think I did dream about being England captain.
I don't think many people do.
I can safely say when I was growing up,
it was all about just trying to play for England.
I mean, that, again, is just as far-fetched as a 15-16-year-old.
But even as a 22, 23-year-old,
when I was in the team playing under Michael at the start,
and Freddie, you know, it wasn't about becoming England captain.
It was being coming the best, trying to win games of cricket for England,
and then, you know, trying to be the best batter you could become.
And then the captaincy kind of gets kind of given to you at a stage.
You kind of, you do know it's coming because you get involved a bit more in the leadership staff
and ours vice captain when Straussie was captain.
So it's kind of almost inevitable if Straussie went that I would become captain.
I think the thing which I look back on now,
There's a couple of things.
The first thing, nothing prepares you to becoming England captain.
You can read all the leadership books you want.
You can read, you can go and speak to as many as old captains as you want.
You can read Mike Brearley's art of captaincy,
and nothing makes a difference until you are thrown in that job the day they offer it to you.
And you can captain your county as well, and I don't think that makes a difference either.
might make you slightly more comfortable on the field in certain situations
but Captain Essex or compared to Captain England it is so different
so I think every captain learns on that job and you're thrown into a job which
which is amazing it's the best job I ever did it's the hardest job I ever do
and and there's so many things which went right so many things which went wrong
throughout I think probably the thing I did learn is actually the saddest thing about it
It's probably the best leader as a captain and as a person.
You've developed so much in the four years or five years I did it.
It was actually the day you hand the cat back and say,
actually I don't want to do it anymore.
Actually, actually is probably when you're at the best as a captain,
but maybe not for that team.
At the moment, I felt I kind of ran out of steam
and I think the team needed a fresh impetus.
But as me personally, as a leader, I felt I'd learn everything through those five years.
And I was probably ready to go and captain a different team or a different style.
sorry, a different set of players,
but certainly not the players I was captain at the end,
but of that England's,
I think they had enough for me, but yeah,
that's what I've took from him.
Yeah, I'll be honest,
you kind of wing it.
It sounds, you get given the job,
and you think, right, how am I going to go back captain in England?
I remember, I was petrified walking into,
I think it was at Lord's First,
my, I'm talking that, you know,
2003, I got the one-day job,
And at that time, the one-day job, I'm not disrespecting the role,
but it didn't matter a great deal.
You know, it was all about the test captain's seat.
I then get the test captain's sea.
And I always remember walking into a team room at Lourdes.
We were playing South Africa,
just a few days after we drew against South Africa
at Edgebast and NASA resigned on a Monday.
I think we start on a Thursday.
And it must have been the Tuesday or the Wednesday night
that I walk into a team room with all these senior pros,
and I had no clue what I was going to say.
So I just winged it.
What did you say?
I just said, come on, we've got to get together.
Play the way that you all can play.
Trust your game.
If we get the chance to get on top,
let's make sure that we're playing in a way
that the crowd would like to watch.
And then a week later,
I think we got hammered in that first game,
absolutely destroyed.
Should have thought about what you were going to say.
Yeah, honestly.
And then the week after,
I think I had to give a rollicking or two
because there was a little bit of
lateness and, you know,
I wanted a real discipline team.
I mean, I want a flamboyant team,
but I want a real discipline side to deliver training right.
I wanted everyone to be a bit fitter.
I think I probably mentioned that to one or two of the senior pros.
I didn't think we were fit enough.
I wanted to be more dynamic in the field.
Not that I was the perfect example,
but all the kind of things that everyone dreamed of
that a team would play like,
I probably said that early in my reign
in a team meeting.
But it was my dad gave me the best.
piece of advice. You know, cookie's right.
You can read all the captaincy books you want, but
you know, fundamentally it's about you.
It's about you triggering a
group of people into doing something
and making sure that they can cope with the pressure.
But my dad came to me after
the first week or so when he could see that
I was trying to be this England captain.
He said, look, I've captained
Worcally Cricket Club 3011.
Used to bat number eight bowl, real dodgy
inswingers. So I can't really give you a huge
amount of advice on cricket, but I've
managed people all my life. And he said,
make sure you manage the person, not the player.
So make sure you know who all your players are.
You know, in terms of the personalities, you know,
what they like off the field on.
Obviously, in training, everything about what motivates them,
try and find out what they get up in the morning for.
Some, you know, play the game for numbers.
They want to get as many runs as possible
to make sure that they've got the numbers in the bank,
some play for cash.
Whatever the motivation was I had no problem with,
but I needed to find out from the players.
Yeah, that was the best piece of advice that I got to make sure.
Look, it took me a few late nights in the bar,
getting to know one or two of them.
But that's probably the best piece of advice I got
was to make sure that I knew the person
and then the kind of player looked after itself.
Alison, can you remember then the first time
you would have to have sort of dished out a bit of a rollicking
and how natural or unnatural that felt.
for you?
Yeah, I can't remember the first time.
I remember her giving a rollicking in Abu Dhabi quite late on.
It was really, really warm.
We turned up in Abu Dhabi, and it was, you know, closer to 50 degrees and 40 degrees.
And I think the first next session, the guys were bowling like two or three balls,
and then that was it.
They had to go and sit down.
It was so hot.
And then the second session was the same, and I just thought we were a shambles.
I thought, you know, we had a warm game about two days later.
like the physios weren't having the,
do you know what I mean?
It was like, it was hot and we just basically,
I gave everyone a rollicking that day
because I just thought, well, we know it's hot,
we just got to get on with it,
we're going to have to find a way
and actually improve.
It wasn't really my style to give,
you know,
group stuff like that.
That just wasn't me.
I think the hardest thing,
going back to when you're first captain,
as Vaughner said,
like walking into the room,
I actually, I think we went to London as a group
and I was expected to give a speech
and the flower said you've got to address the side as a captain
and again you write a load of stuff down
I kind of read it word for word probably very robotic
I look back now as it almost cringing
what I actually wrote down and actually said
I'm sure I've got that piece of paper somewhere
because you get asked what style of captain
you're going to be from you know the coach
and the media you walk into that first media
and what's star of captain are actually as Vaughney said wing in it
I was like actually I don't know what star of captain I'm going to be
but, you know, his dad was saying, gives an advice.
The advice, I think, I learn, and a lot of people say,
you cannot, cannot be anyone else but yourself.
You know, people say, what style are captain of me?
I don't know, but someone above me in the leadership role that they're given
has seen something in you, or two or three people have seen something in you
that makes they think that you will be good at leading this next team,
the team for the next three or four years.
And that's not for me to say.
It's not for me to work out.
It's kind of, they're looking at you and go, well, you'll be good at the role and you'll develop into it.
So that was the worst bit about it.
It was that initial feeling like you had to speak.
You feel like you had to give this kind of Churchill, you know, speak.
And that's not me.
That's not who I was.
And actually, as I got older, I realized that.
And you feel like you didn't have to do that.
And actually speaking in the dressing room, rather than writing down notes is actually what, you know,
what I wanted to say, and I got better at just.
saying two or three sentences because actually after two or three sentences,
most of the lads are switched off and forgotten anyway.
So you have 40 seconds, 50 seconds of something and saying that you might land one of them,
which might make a point.
But at the beginning, I was obsessed with, I was obsessed with speaking by public speaking
and speaking to the group.
And actually, you don't need to be, you don't have to do that.
It's more natural and more authentic was certainly a way to be.
Can a captain say, I don't know, Michael?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's important to realize what,
and it just takes a little bit of time and experience to understand the role
and, you know, what you need to do as a player yourself.
I found that the hardest bit is playing myself, you know,
making sure that I was looking after my own game
and scoring the runs that I'd been scoring before I got the captaincy.
I look back now and I think, oh, I've had my time again.
I probably wouldn't spend as much time managing everyone else.
And it wasn't just the other 10 players or the other 14 or 15 that were in the squad.
It's all the management.
It's managing up as well, making sure that everything's right above you in terms of planning for the next tour and everything.
I tried to get involved with everything because I wanted everything to be absolutely spot on.
And I look by thinking, you know, I should have stayed completely out of the way of that and just focus purely on my game because I look at particularly now.
And I was very fortunate as well, an incredible backroom team.
you know, brilliant coaches.
It was all very organised. Everything was done for you.
So really, I didn't really need to really focus too much on that side of the role.
And it was just a matter.
And speaking in front of the group, I did now and again, but not a great deal.
But I was very keen on just making sure that the individuals within the side knew exactly what I expected from them.
You know, I'd give some Kevin Peterson when he came into the side.
I wanted Kev to be a flamboyant player.
You know, I wanted him to take the opposition on.
If that meant that he got out in the 90s every now and again for trying to hit a six,
I didn't care because that's the kind of player that I wanted him to be.
I wanted him to make the opposition bowl a shiver.
Freddie Flintsoff, I wanted him to entertain us.
Never mind the crowd.
I would say to Freddie, Freddie, remember, we want to be entertained on the balcony.
So when you go out to bat, we want to see you whacking out the park.
That's the start of player that you are.
And when you play at your best and you're smiling and you're enjoying it,
that's when you play your best cricket.
So I was more a captain that just spoke to the individuals, really.
I'm sure I made one or two speeches.
I didn't like cookie.
I can't remember making a speech and the player suddenly, you know,
20 minutes later, producing a bit of magic on the field.
I don't think it was that kind of speech.
The huddle, you know, this little huddle.
I brought that in, actually,
because I felt that the dress room had so many people in it.
And I wanted just a small moment with just the 11,
which was away from the dresser room
because in a dressing room
you know you've got four or five players
that potentially aren't playing
so are they listening? Probably not.
All the coaching staff
are they going to listen to everything you say?
Probably not.
You've got the score in the corner,
you've got the mass sushi,
got the train,
they're not really listening.
So I just felt that a huddle was important
for two reasons that
and I hear it a lot of people in sports
oh it's a load of nonsense of huddle.
I actually think it's quite important
because you get the group of 11 players,
whatever the sport is,
just at that moment together.
and I would always say to one or two other players within the team
and it could be anyway, probably cookie early in his career
I would have said just do the huddle
give us a little bit of sort of and by the way
most of it was a joke or a bit of fun
or now and again a little bit of a trigger
of what we were trying to do in that session
or at the start of the game
but I felt that was quite important for the team
just to have that moment together
and it was always just on the outfield
and more often than that Matthew Hoggard
would make an animal noise and try and make us laugh
and that was pretty much it
I remember that one
I was born and said
don't ask me don't ask me
and then about five minutes before you asked him
God he started dreading talking in that huddle
immense isn't it like actually you shouldn't do
but as a young player
talking in front of all those players
became a real thing and I was like
don't ask me don't ask me five minutes before
but just going back to what the first question
you asked Skipper just as a minute ago
was is there anything
you'd mean at the beginning
you wish you'd know and I was like
I was such a stubb, well, I was, I probably am still quite a stubborn person.
I kind of, my batting was all about being stubborn and doing it the way I felt best to do it myself.
So I didn't really trust many other people with my game.
I'd work it out by myself because I felt that that was the only way, you know,
you're the only person goes out of the bat.
And as a captain, I threw with my first 18 months, I did that.
And I wasn't, I didn't listen to many other people in the dressing I did, but I wasn't ears
to outside of the dressing room.
And looking back,
there's so many good people around English cricket
and people who've got so much experience of captain C
and also just they see games in different ways to what I saw.
And I think the first 18 months,
although we were actually, we won quite a lot of games of cricket
in that first 18 months,
I didn't listen to anyone else outside the bubble
and it became stressful that way.
And I wish I did.
I wish I was more open just to bouncing ideas off.
people in that first 18 months but I look back and if I hadn't had done that first 18 months of
being stubborn and doing it my way then because that's kind of that character I was that character
if I went straight into being a captain who listened to everyone else then actually I might
have diluted it anyway do you mean so I had to go through that period to suddenly work out the
balance of who do you listen to and being open to listen to other certain ideas and been able to
bin them so it is such a learning process as a as a person the captaincy
How did the two of you deal as England captains with criticism and scrutiny from former England captains?
It's one of the unique things about cricket.
And it kind of happens to a degree.
It depends who becomes a pundit in football and who doesn't.
Not every England captain ends up being a football pundit.
Most former England cricket captains do end up on radio or on TV or in the written press.
Did you find it difficult?
Did you find it easy?
do you look at it through the same lens now, having moved into this sphere?
Yeah, I mean, at the start, I think the first four and a half years I did the job,
I actually was quite cool about it.
But it gets you eventually.
And you suddenly start to get wound up by things that you can't control.
And the longer you do the job, we work in the media now.
The longer that someone does the job, the more you get bored of that person doing the job,
It's like, oh, we want a bit of change.
So the knives get a little bit sharpened.
It always happens.
So when the knives, and the knives came out for me,
and I got a bit upset with one of two things,
and that's kind of natural.
You know, the best piece of advice I would give a captain,
and it's hard because, you know, you're bound to hear things or read things that,
and particularly now with social media,
I think it's a lot harder because the fans can have their say.
You know, I think when I was England captain,
the only way the fans could really have the say would be in a phone in
on a Saturday.
And there wasn't many of those in cricket.
There wasn't social media.
There was the odd letter, you know, written into the odd tabloid or two.
But it was down to the cricket journalists and that was it.
And obviously, the advice I would give to an England captain would be just be nice to them.
Honestly, because we work with them, cookie.
If you're really nice to them and you buy them a drink every now and again,
buy them a bit of dinner, take them golfing, take them for a game of paddle.
Managers, that's what you mean.
Honestly, yeah.
I think that's a good thing.
That's clever.
Yeah, what's the movie, Roadhouse?
What's the movie, Roadhouse?
The Bouncer.
And he's just dead nice to everybody.
Even people coming at him with glasses,
you know, he's going to smash over the back of the head with a bottle,
and he's just really nice to everyone.
That'd be the advice.
And it's easier said than done, because, as I said,
particularly now, you're going to see things,
and it gets you a lot quicker than it did in our time.
We used to have to wait, I guess, for the Sunday pay.
That was the kind of day where you felt that there might be one of two things said that you wouldn't get necessarily in the week.
Whereas now, I think it's a lot harder because things get said instantly.
There's all these clips on social media.
This will go out as a clip, no doubt.
This show gets put out as a podcast.
So it's a lot harder in this era for a captain or a player.
But what I will say is from my experience, once I got into that position where I was getting a little bit wound up by
what someone said or what someone had written,
that's when I started to fall through as a captain.
I started to go a bit downhill.
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It's kind of inevitable, Alistair, that we'll talk about the current England test captain Ben Stokes in a second.
But I think this all links in quite nicely, actually, because when I sort of listened to Ben Stokes, as someone who obviously doesn't know him and you guys know him, he always sounds like he's wearing his heart on his sleeve and he's saying exactly what he thinks.
So I'm just curious whether you two as England captains, Alistair, always felt able to say exactly what you thought.
or whether sometimes or a lot of the time you tempered it.
I think a lot of the time you have to temper it
because certainly the last thing you ever want to do
as a captain of a group of players
was ever become a headline of criticising your team.
Like it's the most natural thing.
Like you lose a game, you lose a game.
You go out and you have to do three or four interviews,
pretty much live.
And, you know, and they're very good interviews.
to say even aggers is good
that they're trying to get you to
they're trying to get you to say something
and you're just protecting
you're just trying to protect your group of players like
so yes I found a lot of the time
you ended up being defensive
especially when you lost it and it was a hard place to be
because we didn't bowl well but you're gonna
or you didn't bat well you can say that
but you're not going to start singling out a player
who's out of form or you know or played a bad shot
because that would be the headline
And that would be the thing you do.
So yeah, you absolutely, you were,
spent most of your time trying to duck and die at the interview
because actually for me, that was almost the least,
I tried to give the least energy to the media as possible.
And I probably came across badly in that sense
because I was trying to save my energy for A, the team,
and B, trying to score runs.
So I would just try and be almost as cold as I could
because I didn't want to waste energy.
Now looking back, thinking, God,
I probably didn't come across as well as I could have done in those periods because I just didn't give the energy.
The press conference the day before used to just be like, right, I'm just going to, you know, as at 1230 to 1 30, just try and get through it, try not to use any mental energy as I can and probably did come across as pretty dull in those interviews because, you know, for me, it was irrelevant what I said as long as I didn't say anything stupid, just because I wanted to make sure that come tomorrow, as fresh as I could be, because as Vaughn he says, eventually it gets,
It does get you. It does get you because it is an all-encompassing job.
Is it the who that can get you?
Like if you get criticism from a specific person, and it might be because you massively respect them, it might be because you don't.
Or is it the kind of thousand cuts thing?
Is it the volume or who is actually making the criticism?
No, I'd be dead honest.
I was always put back by someone that hit the nail on the head.
Someone who had written or said something, I went, oh, they've got us.
they've got it right
that's where
you know that I was affected by that
because I knew they'd hit the nail on the head
and that's you know this part of the job
of managing your own emotions
I think that's a really important part of being a
captain is making sure that
you know I look back and one of two things
did wind me up particularly down the back end
and you think I look back now
51 years old go why did that wind me up
you know why didn't I just think well that's just the game
just fine just go and hit a few balls
and catch a few and prepare for
match but I did get wound up by
one or two things and you know
you mentioned Ben Stokes I saw
him in the winter and you know he's an
unbelievable captain but I think he
would be the first to admit that in the winter
he was wound up by a lot
of what the media said you know
and fundamentally I know it's easy to say
from behind the microphone but
you can only control your own
emotions and your own game and your own team
you know you can't have any saying
what any of us say or what
what anyone writes
And as I said before, I'm not saying you have to be nice to everyone and like, you know, buy them cookies and make sure that, you know, they're all in a good spirit.
But I just think being really kind of good with the media is a really important part of the job.
You know, being good, being open, honest is fine.
You know, I think we're in an era now, cookie.
There's going to be a headline anyway.
So you might as well, you know, come out and just speak the truth or what you believe is right at that time.
If there's a headline made because of what you've said,
I wouldn't be too worried about that these days.
I just think we're in an area where everything is a headline
because of social media.
It's the one part of the job that, you know,
the actual tactical side of being a captain,
I look back and particularly a young captain might come and say,
oh, you know, what do you reckon as a captain?
I said, the tactical side is the last thing I worry about.
You know, the particular captain in England,
there's many things that I think come before the tactics.
respecting the dresser room you have to have that
you do have to be a good speaker
you know you do have to be a good speaker
because you've got to obviously
you've got to speak to your team
you've got to speak to the media but
I don't think I don't know if you did coach
I didn't have any media training
before I got the England captaincy
I think that's a good thing though
yeah but I just think one or two
I think these younger players now
I think with with
even through the county game
I do think they get a little bit of training
I'm not saying you need a lot
but I think it'd be for all players, not just the captain,
I think it'd be all good for all players to just get a little bit,
just get a little bit of training.
No, I swear we did a bit.
Certainly the Academy, this was in 2006, I reckon, or five and six.
What did you do?
Well, just this guy came in and just started,
I can't remember his name, it's probably pretty bad of me,
I can't remember who it was,
but we did some mock interviews,
we did a few of those, like, down the camera bits,
and you kind of watched it again,
and you saw out of the habits you did,
Was that Essex or with England?
No, England. I swear, at England Academy, we did some training.
I didn't go on the Academy.
Just, you're too old.
The bit like you're saying about headlines, but I know what you're trying to say,
but if, you know, say, Oly Pope this summer, this winter was struggling a bit,
and, you know, I'm sure at a certain stage, you know, Stokesia would have been asked about
Pope's form.
And there's no way, like, you could be honest, too honest,
there, you know, he clearly say he wasn't scoring the runs.
It was. Stokes, he then, as a captain, then can't just go, yeah, he's, yeah, I'm really worried
about him. He's not scoring runs. You have to give the answer of, you know, what, he's,
he's looking good in the nets, you know, I back him. He's being such a, you know, even if he doesn't
believe it. So there is that element of having to play the media game as well.
What did you think, Alistair, when Ben Stokes made, because we talk about headlines,
when he made that comment about, like, no dressing room that I'm captain of is a place for weak men,
that that felt at that moment to be a really significant thing for him to say.
But as a captain, can you do that because you're not talking about one person
and you're not saying this dressing room is full of weak men?
You're giving a specific example, but not about any one individual.
I think that was, you spoke about, or Skipper just spoke about how emotional he got at certain stages in the winter under a huge amount of pressure.
an emotional statement where I think everyone in that dressing would have said of a
noticing on what does he actually mean by that does he mean that I'm weak does he mean that
we're soft I think it was a message that he tried to to get across to his group of
players that they needed to toughen up and win the crucial moments better because actually
that's in that series you know Australia won the bigger moments better than England actually
this England side under Ben Stokes the last
I'll say last year or so, in big moments, they haven't won enough of them,
hence they haven't won the big series.
I think that's quite an obvious statement.
And I think he was kind of using the public forum.
And I trust Stokes has thought about it, the public forum,
to get a big message across that he wasn't happy with what he had been seeing from his team.
Now, whether he got his choice of words, absolutely right.
I don't know.
You're going to have to ask him that.
but I think it was a public message that he wanted his group of players to see.
It's going to be intriguing, isn't it, in the next couple of months with his leadership in particular.
We saw a bit of a clash between, not a clash, but just what you're reading between him and McCullum, the coach,
and how he was speaking and then what Ben was saying and how Ben was playing,
which was very different to what Ben was playing two years ago.
And I think that as a leader is going to be an intriguing.
an intriguing side plot to this
summer of how England do go about it
and how Ben wants his side to play again.
Well, I think the most important partnership
in a cricket team is the captain and the coach.
It's absolutely crucial.
If that is a strong one,
and I'm not saying that behind closed doors,
that they have to be on the same page,
but as soon as they walk into the dressing room,
they have to be on the same page.
As soon as they walk into the media,
they have to be on the same page.
Whatever that page is,
whatever they agree upon.
And it was very clear for me in the winter
that the connection wasn't quite the same.
The connection up until last summer was...
What told you that?
Well, as Alice has just mentioned,
the messaging was different from the captain and the coach.
And that connection has to get back on track.
And that's, you know, I look at my time with Duncan Fletcher,
you know, we weren't exactly the same characters.
But he knew exactly what role he could deliver.
And I knew the kind of role that I was going to deliver.
and that's when you get, you know, Nassau Hussein and Duncan Fletcher had a great relationship.
Nassau's completely different to me, but he still could work in a really professional good way with Duncan Fletcher.
I thought Duncan was excellent as a coach because he was, and I think it's still the case where the coaches will say,
okay, we prepare the team and by the way from around Wednesday when the game starts on Thursday,
captain, it's over to you.
You captain the team and whenever you need something, whatever that is, whether it's a chat or
but you want us to deliver a team chat.
You just come and tell us what you need
because from Thursday morning,
it's all over to you as the captain.
I hope it's still the way.
That's the case.
But that connection between the captain and the coach
is the absolute crucial one.
We're talking about the art of captaincy on Five Live
with Sir Alester Cook and Michael Vaughn.
Let's zone in a little bit more specifically
on Ben Stokes then, Michael.
What do you admire most about him captain to captain?
Well, he's tactically, he's very, very good.
I mean, I've just said that tactically is the last thing that I kind of look at, but he's brilliant.
You know, I don't think any of the team got the facets quite right in Australia, but he generally reads the game really well,
and he's clever enough to get into the opposition psyche with some of his field settings.
I go back to his first 17 games where they won 13, and Jack Leach played in most of those.
And the way that he captained Jack Leeks was wonderfully, bring the field in, try and get the big shot.
I think Jack got six for against New Zealand at Headingley.
And it wasn't spinning square, but he captained it brilliantly.
He just kept on dangling the carrot.
Clearly, he's a captain that I look at.
And he is a, you know, Alistair was brilliant at going on the field and playing.
You know, follow me.
You know, that kind of captain.
He was as good as any opening the batting.
And Ben's that kind of character as well, you know,
he'll never ask anyone to do something that he can't do himself.
You know, I think it, you know, really helps when you're in all.
rounder as well, you know, because you can play
all the different facets of the game.
He can obviously...
Always involved?
Yeah, great impact with the ball.
He's, you know, up until recently where he was, you know,
I think they were all a bit confused of how to play in the winter.
So you kind of put that to one side.
Up until the end of last summer, it was very clear that Ben was willing to play this
expansive game and, you know, he could do it as well as any.
So he can obviously lead by example.
Tactically is very, very good.
And up until the winter, again,
I thought he'd handled the media brilliantly.
You know, he had one or two blips in the winter,
but all captains do.
When you're away from home in Australia, it's going wrong.
I don't recollect an England captain
who's been to Australia and had a tough time,
and you get to the end of the tongue,
oh, they dealt with the media brilliantly.
Yeah, I'm with you.
You know, it's just the nature of the beast
when you're down under and it's not going quite right.
But he delivers very well with the media.
He's obviously a brilliant play.
He's got the respect.
And actually, the tactical side,
I was really surprised by it.
I thought it'd be a brilliant kind of lead.
Like Bathatham Starr, you know, come follow me.
But it's been his tactical announced
and also his empathy to his players.
I know he came out with that one comment in Brisbane
about obviously didn't want any weak players in his dressing room.
I think he has a huge amount of empathy for all his players.
And that's really important that you've got that loving.
And it's not necessarily in the dressing
that you don't spray them every now and again.
But I think publicly he's got a real kind of warmth
to the way that he manages his players.
I've been impressed with his, again, up until this winter,
is the courage of his convictions in his idea,
his idea of how he wanted his side to play.
And it was slightly different to every other captain.
And actually, that takes a lot of nerve to go and do that.
That's actually real leadership.
He's come in, and I don't know whether that was absolutely by design
when he first took over,
when he was given the captaincy
and he has asked the first question in the media,
oh, what style of captain are you going to be?
But very quickly,
he had the nerve and the courage
to change how he wanted his team to play.
So I admire that as much as I admire
all the other stuff that Skipper said about him.
The one point I would like to say,
he just does seem to have this thing with every single player,
some kind of relationship,
which I look at,
I said I probably didn't do that as well.
He seems that whether there's the word empathy,
I don't know, is that that's the right word,
or it's that, you know,
that real understanding of what each player brings to the side at every time.
And I think that that emotional connection he seems to have with players,
whether that's just because he has been through one hell of a,
one hell of a career on and off the field,
way more than what I had.
A lot of it good, some of it, maybe not so good,
but all that gets thrown into the mix to,
to create you as a player.
I think he really understands that
more than I ever would have given him credit for
at the start of his, knowing Ben is,
I admire that so much from him as a leader.
Let's talk a bit about recovering from disappointment then.
So obviously we know for England,
everything was building up to the ashes,
turned out to be a big disappointment.
As a leader, how do you go about picking up those
around you.
I don't know if it's his biggest disappointment.
I wouldn't put words in his mouth,
but after a big disappointment,
which clearly this Ash's husband.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's,
you know, it's intriguing to see how they're going to come back from that
because I said that,
that connection between the captain and the coach
has got to get back on track.
And this style of cricket is going to be interesting to see
whether they go fully in on what they've trying to do
for the last few years or they just kind of,
just temper it slightly.
You know, just slightly.
I just think it just needs a slight tinker.
You know, it was far too really.
risky and playing risky against the better sides.
It's been proven over the last few years that they've been found out,
particularly against India and particularly against Australia.
But fundamentally, I would think him and Basel just get the players together.
And there won't be a great deal of change.
Maybe it would be a new opening batter, maybe a new baller.
I'm thinking of someone like a Matthew Fisher and Ollie Robinson, a Sam Cup,
maybe an English-style opening bowler.
But it's going to be the same group of players.
It's the same background team,
so I think Ben will just be probably trying to make sure
that the players know exactly what their roles are,
what he expects from all the players and the way that they play.
Someone like Ben Duckett's a really important cog in this wheel,
because up until recently, he was flying for England at the top of the order,
coming out and playing this expansive game in recent times.
He had a bit of a struggle.
So I think Ben and Baz will be trying to work with someone like Ben Duckett
to get his mind right.
And that's what leadership's all about,
making sure that all the players that are selected
have got a real clarity in the roles that they as leaders expect from them
and I'm pretty sure that's the work that will go on in May
going into that first game against New Zealand in June.
I'm intrigued because it's the first time I can remember
it's certainly that I can remember actually after the ashes
normally a captain or a coach especially when you lose goes
if you know there's someone someone loses their job
so it's a fresh start you know in 2013,
14 when I lost 5-0
Andy Flower went and we had Peter
Moore's come in and you weren't looking back
you're looking forward you know as a fresh
start we're going to go again we got rid of some players
and it kind of you kind of use
that energy to kind of forget the
disaster that we that we certainly
had in Australia in those you know
November December and January when we were playing in June
that was a different side there was a different group
of players it didn't matter actually at this
occasion because
and as Vaughney has mentioned it will be
a very similar side yes there might be
couple of changes, but it's the same group of players, the same background staff, and they are
intrinsically linked to what happened in that side. There's no looking for, it's not a fresh start
matter of whoever they, whatever they come across the media. So I'm intrigued to see, you know,
it's going to go one or two ways quite quickly, I think, because if they lose a couple of games,
or the decision not to get rid of any of the backroom staff or the coaches, that will be the
story in the media. That's what happens because it's not a fresh start. They won't be,
be given any time to bed in it is it will be about results and how they play very, very quickly.
However, on the other side of that, you've got a group of players who've been through quite a traumatic two or three months as a group together.
And it'll be, as I said, same group of players.
How do they learn from it?
And someone like, let's look at, let's pick Jamie Smith, who had a tough five games.
You know, flown in test cricket, you know, last couple of games in India looked tired in Australia.
got found out a little bit in terms of his batting is keeping under the biggest pressure.
He's gone away.
First three games this summer banged out 200s and an 80.
So he, I reckon, has learnt a lot from it and be becoming a better player.
And that's what you're looking at this side that they've just gone to Australia.
If they come out, if they are better players from this experience and our better leadership,
a group from this experience, then in 18 months time they could win the, you know,
You're looking at winning the ashes.
That's what this group of players must be looking at in the test time.
That's what you're kind of judged on.
You ask me at the beginning, what's the captain judged on, winning a big series.
So that's what I'm intrigued to see over the next couple of months is,
what has this leadership group learned?
And can they take it forward?
It's going to flip very quickly one way or the other, I think, in come of June.
This is the question.
I've been most excited to ask both of you, Michael.
If you could relive one day as England captain, what day would it be?
Lifting the earn is what you play for England for.
It's what you dream of as a player.
And then to think that I was a lucky captain to get the earn in my hand,
and obviously Alistair did it a few years later,
there's nothing beats that,
knowing that Australia are going to have to come in your dress room and have a beer.
That's what you play for.
Yeah, I mean, there was loads and loads.
of times that people wouldn't really think that I would talk about
in terms of special moments as England captain.
But winning in the Caribbean, we won a series in South Africa.
That was special.
But you set out.
I mean, we do put a huge amount of empathy on the ashes.
It's pretty much what we all talk about.
It's obviously going to Australia now next year, 27,
can England get the ashes back?
So when you get that opportunity to just walk up the stairs
and get the little, it's only tiny.
And I actually lifted the urn at the oval
and I looked underneath and there was a 2999 sticker.
I think they got it from the Lord's shop.
Was yours the same, cookie?
I think they'd took the sticker off they'd learned in 2005.
It might have been a bit more than 2999.
It might have been 4999.
It's a good replica for that.
What was that like then in that,
when the Aussie players have to come in for a drink?
Because, okay, obviously the best bit of that day is lifting the earn.
It sounds like that was a very close second.
Yeah, I mean, that's special.
To be brutally honest, it's just relief.
Right.
It's just a huge amount of relief that, you know, you've won.
You know, the art of playing sport is about winning.
You know, and when you lose a game and you're the captain,
it hurts a lot more than when you're a player.
But when you win a game or a series of a game,
captain. You know, you love it as a player, but you feel that extra
buzz as being the captain. And, you know, I'm not saying it's
down to the captain all the time, but you know, you go through a lot as a, as an
England captain for those moments. And that's why we'll keep talking about the
Ben and Baz McCollum partnership is that they've given us some great, great
moments, but they're yet to have that moment of lifting the major
trophies. And that's what they'll hope to reset this summer to make sure that by
27 around September or August time.
I don't even know when the series is next year,
but whatever that moment is,
Ben will be going to bed at night thinking,
I want to be that captain that's on that podium
next August, September time with the earning his hands.
What dear would you relive, Alistair?
Do you know the couple I'd like to relive?
And I'd like to go back to that Nagpaw one
in my first ever series winning in India
and actually enjoying that last day.
because I even though it was the flattest wicket the world
and you know there was almost little chance
of getting bold out because if we did we would be
I don't know how we wouldn't have been a bad
and actually trotting belly back beautifully
and I just didn't watch a ball of it
because I was pacing up and down the train room
thinking we can't mess this up
and I'd like to go back and just relax
and sit and enjoy that moment
because that was a long tour to win in India
and then probably you know apart from picking up the
and apart from the actual moment
would be the Stuart Broad 8 for 15
you know a 2-1 in the series
thinking this is a member
this is after we'd lost 5-0
and beginning of the series
everyone was saying in Australia
are going to hammer us
and we'd won at Edgepiston
fairly convincingly as well in three days
it was 2-1 and win the toss and bowl
and by lunch we were batting again
and I'll just love to go back and experience that
and enjoy it knowing the result thinking
because even as a captain they're the two day
that day that game I
I slept less in that game than I slept in any other thing,
even though I think we were 250 for four at the end of day one,
leading by almost 200 runs, 2-1-up.
I mean, it's almost impossible to lose from there.
And yet I just did not sleep.
Imagine you're the captain who lost from here.
Imagine this, imagine that.
I just could not get any sleep,
and I just didn't enjoy those two days until that final wicket mark wood it took.
And, you know, that feeling of relief was, as Skipper said,
It is relief and it is kind of that,
oh, the weight of the world's off your shoulder.
But I'd like to go back to those three days
and actually enjoy the eight for 15,
not thinking there'll be a partnership,
there'll be this and that.
To be honest, gross.
I absolutely loved the captaincy more than the kind of batting side.
I know that two or three years of my career.
But if young people come to me,
so I want to be the captain, I go, why?
Really?
Well, yeah, honestly, yeah.
I mean, I just go, why just be a player?
There's so much kind of nonsense that you have to do.
with and just enjoy playing the game.
And, you know, I always think the best captains generally arrive.
You know, those that have kind of made, you know, they're almost made too early.
I think the best, like Ben Stokes has surprised us.
You know, five or six years ago, would you have thought that Ben Stokes would have been the captain that,
would you have thought Ben Stokes would have been the captain?
Probably not.
Kind of gets the job.
And you think, wow, yeah, he's surprised us all.
He's been fantastic.
And I think that's generally a school of thought that, you know, it,
If you feel that someone is the captain
and is the captain for a long period of time,
you're kind of looking and going,
okay, that's the captain, is it?
And then someone gets the job and you go,
oh, this fella's all right.
Where's he come from?
And I think that's just at the time,
you generally always,
cricket's a funny sport,
you generally always give the captaincy
to the best player at that time,
and it's not always the case.
I don't know,
for me.
I think the enjoyment of trying to build something
is, you know, build a team,
and make decisions about it.
And the challenge of that was amazing.
Like, I look back, I understand what you're saying,
just play, just play.
And you play for a bit, and then you want something more.
And the challenge of building that side,
yes, is it hard work?
Is it stressful?
Yeah, is it, it's all that stuff.
But it's also just the opportunity to make a difference
and make a difference in a certain way.
That's what I loved.
And absolutely, you know, I can go back and list
how many bad headlines I had about my captain's C,
everyone tends to forget about it now
but you know
I was described as the worst captain ever
by certain members of the pub
I don't know if it's you've only
but certainly some
pundits did but
I'm pretty sure it wasn't me
might have been an Australian
that's not longer here
yeah I think it was yeah
but I just I just loved that challenge of it
I just love the challenge of trying to make a difference
in certain things and
I did enjoy when I finished
going back and you know
the England bit was a bit weird
because you're part of the side and not, you know,
not make it so careful not to step on Joe Roots toes.
The idea of going back when I finished playing for England,
Essex and captains here couldn't have been further from.
I had no interest whatsoever doing that.
But actually when you are captain,
it is an amazing thing to do.
What I'm saying, Cookie, is my message to all those players that are playing the game
is don't set out to be the captain.
No.
Just be the best player that you can possibly.
the best teammate that you can possibly be.
You know, just get involved with the culture of the dressroom.
Do you know what?
The captaincy will naturally come to you.
Don't go desperately wanting it.
Is there anybody with hindsight you would have captained differently to the way you did, Michael?
I'm sure there are one or two, but honestly I had no regrets.
The day that I gave up the job, I was upset because I knew that was it.
You know, I realistically knew I'd never play for England again.
So got a bit emotional about that.
The reason that I kind of stepped away from the job
is that it was time for someone else.
And I had no regrets.
I'd given it everything,
and I'd kind of done it as well as I possibly could.
I'm sure there was many moments
that I could have managed people better.
But fundamentally, I kind of left the job thinking,
you know, I've given it a right, good crack.
You know, I've given it my best shot.
I'm a big believer in sport.
You've got to entertain the fans.
You know, you have to entertain the public.
And I felt over the period
that we had a bit of a group of players that could do that.
Had a bit of fun along the way.
Got stressed along the way.
But fundamentally, yeah, there would have been,
but I don't categorically remember one or two.
Look, dropping Steve Harmeson and Matthew Hoggard was quite hard.
You know, managing that situation in New Zealand.
I didn't think Cookie was there as well.
When we brought Jimmy Anderson and Stuart brought in for those two,
that wasn't easy.
And I'm sure I could have dealt with that maybe a little bit better,
But I had no regrets.
That's why I kind of was a bit tearful when I left the role.
I think I would envy anybody with no or few regrets more than I would envy anybody else in any walk of life, to be honest, Alistair.
I think there's a couple of things.
I think managing your mates is really hard.
I found that in particular, you know, people like Jimmy and Swanee to start with.
I found a really interesting balance of I spent a lot of time with those guys.
And suddenly you're a captain, I found that a really intrigued.
interesting thing, whether I got that absolutely spot on all the time, I don't know.
And I suppose the only other, I mean, apart from the obvious thing, which is kind of
define my captaincy, actually, was maybe my role in, I look back now, and you had to
probably ask them, how many opening partners I had and whether I managed that situation
particularly well. I don't know. Like, we had, however, 13 is a pub question, or 15 opening
partners, and everyone kind of played seven games, and yet nothing I did as a leader as kind of
made any of them play more and actually a lot of them were very good players and probably could
have played more. So I wonder I wonder whether I managed that situation very well. I don't know.
Last thing. Can you remember how well you dealt with no longer being England captain?
Oh no, did I struggle? I missed it. You know, I found it difficult to watch for a while.
I think there was a game against South Africa at the Evela went away.
Kevin took over, won that game.
I can't remember whether they were in the winter,
but I watch bits and bobs.
I'll be totally honest, really,
I enjoy going back to Yorkshire for a year or so
and just being in amongst the Yorkies.
And, you know, my cricket kind of energy,
dodgy knees, spending too much time on the physio,
my energy for playing kind of got sapped.
So the actual thought of captaining him
was the last thing on my mind,
because my body wasn't good enough,
I wasn't playing well enough.
You know, I had no regrets at all.
And I'll be honest, I've not really...
I like being in the commentary dressing room.
Yeah.
I've not missed being in the cricket dressing room that much.
So I'm probably one of the fortunate ones that has left the dressing room.
And I haven't really ever had one of those moments where I thought,
oh, I wish I could be back in the dressing room.
I like being in around the commentary box.
I like being at the golf club, like playing paddle tennis.
I found
if it is something that you have to find
I found it quite quickly
and yeah I think I'm one of the fortunate ones
oh guys what an absolutely
fascinating hour I can just say Michael
I'm glad you enjoyed being back at Yorkshire
I was covering Yorkshire that season
you didn't give me any interviews so
did I? No
was it all out? Was it all out?
I didn't enjoy it that much every time
I was like Michael Michael no
you know well you generally only interview
those that score runs on the county day
um Alistair lovely to help you with us as always
That was fascinating. Thank you. Thank you, Michael. Cheers.
Cheers.
Brilliant. Sir, Alistair Cook and Michael Vaughn, who've been with us on Five Live Sport,
The Art of Captancy.
I'm Rich Hall, and this is Sports Strangest Crimes,
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