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Ashes: Trevor Bayliss to step down as England coach in 2019

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http://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/42617727

Trevor Bayliss will step down as England coach when his contract expires at the end of the 2019 Ashes.

The 55-year-old, who was appointed in 2015, has just seen his side beaten 4-0 in Australia, but told England director of cricket Andrew Strauss of his plans a year ago.

"I'm contracted to September 2019 and that will see me out," the Australian told BBC Sport.

"I've always felt that it's time for a change around that four-year mark."

He added: "A new voice and a different approach reinvigorates things."

Bayliss led England to a home Ashes triumph in his first summer in charge and later presided over a Test series win in South Africa and a run to the final of the 2016 World Twenty20.

With the World Cup on home soil in 2019, England's steady progress in the 50-over game has been such that a semi-final defeat in the 2017 Champions Trophy was seen as a disappointment.

However, the team's recent Test results have been mixed.

In 38 matches under Bayliss, they have lost 18 and won 15. The tour of Australia extended their winless run in away Tests to 11 matches.

England's next assignment in Test cricket is two matches in New Zealand in March, with the squad for that trip due to be announced on Tuesday at 22:00 GMT.

Australia coach Darren Lehmann will also leave his post after the 2019 Ashes in the UK.

In a wide-ranging interview with the BBC, Bayliss also said:

He can't see any "big changes" following the latest Ashes defeat in Australia.
Batsmen Mark Stoneman and James Vince deserve more chances in the Test side.
The off-field problems of the Ashes tour have made this tour one the toughest of his career.
The "penny has dropped" for the players about their off-field behaviour.
England may have to risk losing at home in order to improve away.

'Stoneman and Vince showed potential'

Of the inexperienced members of England's batting line-up in Australia, Dawid Malan scored a maiden Test century and ended the series as England's leading runscorer.

Stoneman and Vince both made two half-centuries but ended with averages in the mid-20s. Stoneman did not pass 24 in his final four innings, while Vince was often dismissed in the same manner - an edge to the wicketkeeper or slips.

"The way Stoneman and Vince played, they do deserve a bit more of a chance," said Bayliss. "They were playing against one of the best attacks in the world in their home conditions and showed the potential they have.

"They are aware that it's about performance and scoring enough runs. If, over a period of time, that doesn't happen and you have to look for someone else, that is the way of the game."

As for the rest of the side that could line up for the first Test in Auckland, Bayliss does not expect it to be dissimilar from the one beaten by an innings in the final Ashes Test.

England are still awaiting news on Ben Stokes after the all-rounder was arrested for an altercation outside a Bristol nightclub in September.

Pace bowlers Craig Overton, Mark Wood, Chris Woakes and Toby Roland-Jones are all looking to return to fitness, while leg-spinner Mason Crane is set to travel after making his debut in Sydney.

Batsman Gary Ballance, who did not play a Test on the Ashes tour, could miss out, with players such as Liam Livingstone, Joe Clarke or Dan Lawrence potential candidates for a first senior tour.

"I can't see any big changes," said Bayliss. "We've known for a couple of years that we have been three or four performing players short of a very, very good team.

"Probably five or six positions in the squad will be discussed."

'Off-field issues made it a challenge'

In Australia, England were not only hampered by the absence of Stokes but, in the early part of the tour, had to deal with several off-field issues.

Wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow was accused of 'headbutting' Australia's Cameron Bancroft, while Lions batsman Ben Duckett poured a drink over senior bowler James Anderson. Both incidents occurred in the same Perth bar.

When news of Duckett's indiscretion emerged during a tour match in Perth, an irate Bayliss suggested some players would start paying with their place in the side if behaviour did not change.

He has since seen an improvement, but still believes the furore around the off-field problems created one of the most difficult tours of his career.

"Some of the off-field stuff at the start of the tour was as tough as I've experienced," said the former Sri Lanka coach.

"You could do without it, but I think the penny has finally dropped with the boys that we are in a different environment nowadays. Going forward I don't foresee any problems there.

"It certainly made it a challenge earlier in the tour, but you look back now and, apart from that and the result, it's been an enjoyable Ashes contest. Sometimes, even on the losing side, it's enjoyable to be involved in."

Australia have lost only one home Ashes series since 1986-87
England's winless run away from home is part of a longer-term problem, with just one victorious series abroad since 2012.

In the same time period, they have been beaten only once in the UK.

In order to reverse their travelling fortunes, perhaps by nurturing a spinner or bowler of high pace, Bayliss says England might have to gamble with their home form.

"That could be a risk," he said. "If that was to occur and we're not as successful as we'd like to be because we're blooding some young players, we have to take that on the chin and hopefully everyone realises that we're heading in a certain direction.

"Hopefully if you have those guys around the squad, they force their way in. That would be the best scenario.

"One of things you get from new players in a squad is a youthful intensity that can up the interest of everyone.

"It might be, home or away, you chop and change a little bit. You might blood a young fast bowler somewhere like South Africa, or a young spinner in the subcontinent."
 
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Winning the Ashes will be a good way to go. I think he's improved the England white ball sides a lot but the Test side is still the same ie good at home rubbish away from home.
 
How to avoid getting sacked - announce your retirement date.
 
How to avoid getting sacked - announce your retirement date.

Agreed, I still think he will struggle to survive a potentially rubbish upcoming performance in New Zealand.
 
Coaches are blamed way too much for the failures or credited for success.

You can't don't do much if you don't have the talent. England don't have the bowlers, and have a brittle batting line up in test cricket.
 
If the test team carried on performing badly he would have been sacked anyway. I think he has done a good job in LO but in tests not having any idea about the county system has Ayer a part in his downfall. Furthmore his philosophy of having a long batting order and playing bits and pieces cricketers instead of specialists was something which I didn't agree with. It didn't benefit the team away from home as shown in the results in India and Australia.
 
This guy is a joker.

Let me get this straight - Nathan Lyon is tormenting England's numerous left handers so who's the backup batsman in the squad ? The left handed TTF Gary Ballance !

England made Moeen Ali the #2 spinner in the Lord's Test vs South Africa with Liam Dawson the frontline spinner. That experiment was soon dropped. Yet now in the last Ashes Test in Sydney they decide to debut Mason Crane. Why didn't you blood Crane back at home in the summer instead of this baptism of fire ?

Why continually waste Bairstow at 6 and 7 when he's one of the best batsmen in the team and should be playing at 5 ?

Why play TTF James Vince at 3 away to Australia when he did ZILCH in County Cricket and at Test level ? When he's not learned from his mistake of repeatedly making starts before nicking off by playing at deliveries.

I get England aren't blessed with a lot of options but these are self-inflicted wounds. If this sort of baffling and illogical decision making continues then Bayliss won't make it to 2019.
 
1) Cook
2) Hameed
3) Malan
4) Root (c)
5) Bairstow (wk)
6) Stokes
7) Ali
8) Rashid/Crane/Patel
9) Woakes
10) Broad
11) Anderson

This should be the English team for the home summer. New Zealand should be the last straw for Vince and Stoneman. Malan looks a solid player and should do well at #3, if Root does not want to bat there himself.
 
Bayliss may or may not be a great coach, but it's not his fault if the senior players and captain either go missing for most of the series. Or that the selectors think a Test failure who currently and cumulatively averages 30 odd in county cricket, should bat at 3. Or that England haven't found a reliable opener since Strauss.

Which coach could do differently when a team is new faces and failing seniors?
 
Bayliss has presided over a “positive” batting culture which has led to numerous avoidable Test defeats.

He only got the job because Jason Gillespie refused to rule out seeking the selection of Kevin Pietersen.

What a mistake that was, on both counts.
 
This coach was bought on after the 2013/14 Ashes debacle. The English team has shown no improvement at all since then, the players who were introduced in the side after the 2013/14 debacle i.e. Moen Ali and co have shown to be no patch on Kevin Pietersen who was sacked and scapegoated for the 2013/14 Ashes debacle.

Even more embarrassing is that this English team just turned up to Australia with absolutely zero research and homework done on the local Australian conditions and ended up arriving with a squad of 16 which worked for them in England but were going to be found wanting in England.

Bayliss and Andrew Strauss need to be sacked for this failure.
 
Andrew Flintoff felt he had to “try and make a difference” by applying to become England head coach in 2014 – and would throw his hat into the ring again.

Trevor Bayliss has announced his intention to step down after the 2019 Ashes series.

Flintoff, 40, played a key part in a memorable Ashes win for England in 2005.

The Lancastrian revealed he had been left so “disgusted” by the state of the national squad a couple of years ago that he sent an email to the England and Wales Cricket Board to make his interest in the position known.

Speaking in the latest episode of BBC Radio 5 live’s podcast Flintoff, Savage and the Ping Pong Guy, the former allrounder said once it was established that Peter Moores would be reapplying for the job, his interested cooled.

However, Flintoff would not rule himself out of the running when the top job comes up again.

“I’m talking with my heart, yes (I’ll apply), I want to do it one day… if they want me to do it, I’ll do it,” Flintoff said on his podcast.

Flintoff revealed how the ECB had taken some convincing his 2014 application was for real.

“I thought you can bang on about it and put players down, or actually do something about it? I thought: ‘do you know what? I’ll have a crack at this’, knowing I probably wouldn’t get the job,” he said.

“You had to apply like you do with any job, so I wrote an e-mail to the lad who was doing the interview process. Two weeks pass. No reply. Three weeks pass, no reply.

“They (ECB) didn’t believe it was my e-mail. I’ve had one e-mail address all my life, and they said they didn’t know it was me.”

Flintoff continued: “We spoke about it and I was serious, but I had to think if I’d be better than the person they’re choosing.

“Peter Moores was the front runner. In my heart of hearts and honest opinion, I would not be better than him.

“I’ve got so much time for him, so after a half an hour conversation, I withdrew myself, because Peter Moores, for me, was the best option – but also said if Moores doesn’t get it, put me back in the hat.”

Flintoff – who following retirement after 79 Test matches had spells at boxing as well as media work and winning the Australian version of I’m A Celebrity in 2015 – feels he could bring something different to a coaching role.

He said: “A coach’s job now is to get players feeling the best they can be to perform, as a coach or mentor, that’d be my greatest asset.

“When I look back now, I should’ve spent more time on my head.

“I spent all the time in the gym and practising, but I should’ve spent more time focusing on my mind.”

Flintoff believes the current England Test squad have plenty of hard work ahead following their comprehensive Ashes defeat in Australia.

“For the first time in a long time, Australia have become Australia again, they were ruthless,” he said.

“England have gone back to England, back to the way they were in the 1990s – soft.”

http://sport.bt.com/cricket/andrew-...england-head-coach-role-again-S11364243792174
 
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