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ECB appoint Chris Silverwood as England Men’s Head Coach [Post #47]

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Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur is one of the names being considered as a replacement for England coach Trevor Bayliss when he leaves at the end of the summer.

On Monday, England director of cricket Ashley Giles said he had informally sounded out candidates.

South African Arthur, who has also coached his home nation and Australia, has been spoken to.

He is known to be interested in the job, confirming as much in July.

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Arthur has tasted success in the UK, having been in charge of South Africa when they won a Test series in 2008, and again when Pakistan won the Champions Trophy in 2017.

Australian Bayliss has opted to leave England when his contract expires after the Ashes.

Despite the heavy workload placed on England coaches, the intention is for his successor to preside over all three formats.

That potentially narrows the list of options, with many coaches preferring short-term roles in Twenty20 leagues, rather than an intensive international schedule.

Australian Andrew McDonald has been linked to the job, but told Test Match Special on Thursday: "With the franchise game, you get the opportunity to work with the best players in the world and spend less time away from home.

"The excitement of the franchise space outweighs the grind, taxation and time away from the family."

When asked if he would be interested in the England job, McDonald, who will take charge of the Birmingham-based team in the new Hundred competition, said: "I've taken this job and declared my hand."

Other potential candidates are South Africa coach Ottis Gibson and former India coach Gary Kirsten.

West Indian Gibson has had two spells as England bowling coach and took charge of South Africa at the end of 2017.

With his Proteas contract due to expire, Gibson, who lives in England, said in May that he was "happy to be linked with any job".

Kirsten, the former South Africa opener, won the World Cup with India in 2011 and is currently in charge of Indian Premier League side Royal Challengers Bangalore.

In addition, current England assistants Chris Silverwood, Paul Collingwood and Graham Thorpe could be considered.

Giles has previously spoken of his desire to appoint an Englishman, but said that will come second to finding the "best bloke".

And, it could be that the job has come too soon for all of Silverwood, Collingwood and Thorpe.

There is a possibility that England will have an interim coach for the tour of New Zealand in November, but that would be less likely if they do promote from within.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/49211992
 
But but according to some experts here Mickey is a useless coach who couldn't get a job anywhere else.
 
Is it confirmed that Mickey is leaving Pakistan then? I thought they had decided to let him stay?
 
Read the replies of England fans
They know he is a pathetic coach

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur under consideration to replace Trevor Bayliss. <br><br>Special report from <a href="https://twitter.com/stephanshemilt?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@stephanshemilt</a> on the candidates for the <a href="https://twitter.com/englandcricket?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@englandcricket</a> coaches role. <br><br>�� <a href="https://t.co/awPpASdtjB">https://t.co/awPpASdtjB</a><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/bbccricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#bbccricket</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ASHES?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ASHES</a> <a href="https://t.co/uJalzhAJW7">pic.twitter.com/uJalzhAJW7</a></p>— Test Match Special (@bbctms) <a href="https://twitter.com/bbctms/status/1157541324616339457?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 3, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
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We have our set of experts who want Mickey to be removed .This is surely egg on their face
 
Is it confirmed that Mickey is leaving Pakistan then? I thought they had decided to let him stay?

he is not going any where that is pretty much sure from the behalf of pcb but if mickey changes his mind than one can do little about it .
 
Kirsten. We need to learn to bat in tests again. Bayliss only understands ODIs and with the WC win his ob is done.
 
We lost 26 ODI matches vs NZ, Australia, England and SA in bilateral matches and only won 5 and also Asia cup. Less said about the test matches , the better

There is nothing worse than Mickey
 
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If England want to be minnow again in ODIs then Mickey is the right person for this job
 
Mickey is a hack. ECB needs to consider internal options, preferably Collingwood.
 
Mickey Arthur hasn’t done a great job apart from developing Babar and setting the fitness standards high.

In another country he would’ve sacked a long time ago.

So I don’t think this is a great idea for England.
 
We lost 26 ODI matches vs NZ, Australia, England and SA in bilateral matches and only won 5 and also Asia cup. Less said about the test matches , the better

There is nothing worse than Mickey

so you are going to pick selective stats to proved your biased .Why not put overall performances of mickey arthur as coach for pakistan .I can only laugh at your mentioning aus series where every body knows pakistan did not picked there first choice 5 players in that particular series

Why are england considering him if there is nothing worse than mickey?:rabada2
 
so you are going to pick selective stats to proved your biased .Why not put overall performances of mickey arthur as coach for pakistan .I can only laugh at your mentioning aus series where every body knows pakistan did not picked there first choice 5 players in that particular series

Why are england considering him if there is nothing worse than mickey?:rabada2

These are selective stats? These numbers are all your bilateral series against top teams :))
 
These are selective stats? These numbers are all your bilateral series against top teams :))

when did bilateral have become more important than lets say champion trophy? :moyo2.You are picking a seleciive stats it is not any brainier
 
Mickey Arthur hasn’t done a great job apart from developing Babar and setting the fitness standards high.

In another country he would’ve sacked a long time ago.

So I don’t think this is a great idea for England.

CT 2017 and #1 ranking T20?
 
Mickey Arthur may not do well with England. He literally got kicked out when he was an Aussie coach.

Gary Kirsten seems like a great fit for England.
 
I don't think Mickey Arthur will get the job. Think the ECB may hire someone who knows the county game. Wouldn't rule out a non English coach.
 
I don't think Mickey Arthur will get the job. Think the ECB may hire someone who knows the county game. Wouldn't rule out a non English coach.

ECB has beeExcept peter moores, ECB has been spot on with their choice of coach going back to Duncan fletchers appointment, knowing this makes me sure that mickey arthur isn't getting that job
 
Mickey being considered by ECB doesnt validate his coaching credentials. Not to forget he was hired Australia only to be sacked months later.
 
If Gary Kirsten is available considering his success he will be a solid choice.

Ottis Gibson is in contention because of his past experience with Eng as bowling coach and assistant coach
 
Think this kind of news is good for these coaches to get themselves good salary uplifts !
 
Lol why would the ECB in their right frame of minds consider Mickey Arthur who doesn't have much to show for himself as Pakistan's coach apart from the 2017 CT win
 
Pakistan are not renewing the contract of head coach Mickey Arthur, who is a potential replacement for England's outgoing Trevor Bayliss.

South African Arthur, 51, has been in charge since May 2016 and led Pakistan to the 2017 Champions Trophy title.

However, they failed to reach the semi-finals of this summer's World Cup.

Bowling coach Azhar Mahmood, batting coach Grant Flower and trainer Grant Luden will also leave their roles, the Pakistan Cricket Board has announced.

PCB chairman Ehsan Mani thanked the four men for their "unwavering commitment", adding: "It was time for new leadership.

"The PCB remains committed to its fans and followers and we will do our utmost to ensure we make decisions that continue to move Pakistan cricket forward in all formats."

England's World Cup-winning coach Bayliss is stepping down when his contract expires after this summer's Ashes series against Australia.

The 56-year-old Australian will take charge of Sunrisers Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League in 2020.

Arthur, who has also coached his home nation and Australia, has been spoken to by England as a potential successor.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/49261680
 
Gary Kirsten will hold talks with ECB director of cricket Ashley Giles on Wednesday over the vacant role of England head coach, Sky Sports News understands.

Kirsten is the leading candidate to replace Trevor Bayliss, who stepped down as head coach after the Ashes series against Australia.

Sky Sports News understands the interview process is ongoing and that Giles is also meeting with other hopefuls.

The 51-year-old has previous experience of international coaching, having enjoyed spells in charge of India and South Africa earlier in his career.

Giles has previously stated his preference for an Englishman as head coach, with Chris Silverwood - the current fast bowling coach - considered another front-runner due to his previous title-winning experience at Essex.

Surrey's Alec Stewart has also been linked with the role, as has England's batting coach Graham Thorpe and Ireland coach Graham Ford.

Giles will hope to appoint a new head coach in time for England's tour of New Zealand, which begins with a T20 international in Christchurch on November 1.

https://www.skysports.com/cricket/n...eet-ashley-giles-over-england-head-coach-role
 
Kirsten is a top class coach. He is exactly what this England team needs. They are hugely talented but a bit short on composure. He did a brilliant job with India.
 
I think Kirsten would be an amazing coach for England. His method suits big teams.
 
I wanted Kirsten all along. Hope he gets it.
 
Kirsten please, ECB.

Atherton agrees with you!

====


(Reuters) - Former South Africa batsman Gary Kirsten would be the perfect candidate to replace Trevor Bayliss as England coach and the country’s cricket board should not hesitate to make another overseas appointment, former captain Michael Atherton said.

British media reported that former India coach Kirsten has emerged as the leading contender to take over from Australia’s Bayliss, who departed after the Ashes series against Australia following their maiden 50-over World Cup triumph earlier this year.

Atherton said that the 51-year-old’s experience of guiding India to the 2011 World Cup title and coaching South Africa to the top of the test rankings a year later had given him the advantage over English candidates for the role.

“It’s dangerous to fall into the trap of thinking a foreign accent makes you a better candidate, but no English coach has such an impressive CV as Kirsten’s,” former opener Atherton wrote in the Times newspaper.

If appointed, Kirsten would be only the fourth foreigner to coach England in a list that also includes Zimbabweans Duncan Flecther and Andy Flower.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-c...idate-to-coach-england-atherton-idUKKBN1WI0MO
 
We need a hardman from Southern Africa who can teach our flashy pyjama players how to grind out a proper Test innings.

Well there are signs that they are picking the right guys now. Burns and Denly have advanced. They aren’t Strauss & Cook, but can build some sort of platform for Root who can drop back to his proper position.
 
Joe Root, England's Test captain, has not been involved in the selection of a new coach for the team, but knows what he wants from any prospective candidate: a focus on Test cricket and the infusion of new energy.

Trevor Bayliss stepped down as coach after the Ashes at home. While under him England grew into a limited-overs force, winning the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup 2019, they had mixed success in Test cricket. They recorded a historic series sweep in Sri Lanka and won against India at home, but also struggled in Australia, New Zealand and West Indies, and conceded the Ashes at home for the first time in 18 years.

Root, a part of the World Cup-winning side, now hopes that the team can turn its focus back on red-ball cricket.

"One thing you always want from a new coach is a bit of energy and a slightly different way of going about things," he told PA. "Trevor did a brilliant job managing English cricket, but I’m sure whoever comes in will want to put their stamp on it quite early.

"Personally, I'm looking forward to Test cricket being slightly more of a priority than it has been for the past few years."

Gary Kirsten, the former South Africa batsman, who coached India to a World Cup win in 2011, is being seen as a front-runner to replace Bayliss. Root made it clear that he isn't involved in the selection process, but had polite praise for Kirsten.

I'm looking forward to Test cricket being slightly more of a priority than it has been for the past few years.
Joe Root

"You look at the list and I'm thrilled with the names involved," he said. "There's a lot of noise around certain individuals, but the group have all done special things and could bring good things to English cricket.

"Gary has obviously had a fantastic time in international cricket, he's done some wonderful things with India and South Africa – domestically done some good stuff, recently in Twenty20 cricket. He's obviously a very accomplished, all-round coach."

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1367858
 
England bowling coach Chris Silverwood has emerged as a leading contender to replace Trevor Bayliss as head coach.

Reports linked South African Gary Kirsten to the job but Silverwood could pip him to the role.

The 44-year-old former fast bowler, who played six Tests for England, became bowling coach in January 2018 after leading Essex to their first County Championship title in 25 years the previous summer.

An announcement is expected next week.

The new coach's first assignment in charge of England would be the tour of New Zealand, where two Tests follow five Twenty20 internationals.

They would inherit a team that is the 50-over world champion side and will be looking to do the double at the T20 World Cup in Australia in 2020.

But, as per the instructions of director of cricket Ashley Giles, who has stated that England will place a renewed focus on red-ball cricket, the main objective will be to improve the fortunes of an inconsistent Test team.

It is Giles who is ultimately responsible for the appointment of the new coach - one which could perhaps be a surprise given the wave of support for Kirsten in the past week.

However, Giles did state his preference for appointing an Englishman and endorsed Silverwood's credentials as long ago as February.

Giles looks likely to opt against splitting the head coach's role between the Test and limited-overs sides, with the new head coach presiding over both.

It is understood former England captain Alec Stewart made the shortlist and was invited to a final interview.

However, the Surrey director of cricket withdrew from the reckoning because of the demands of the schedule and the impact on his family.

Bayliss stepped down from the role following this summer's drawn Ashes series against Australia.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/49929124
 
Silberwood? Really? He did nothing much in an England shirt.

Surely the players will be more inspired by someone who has had a fine test career.
 
England: Chris Silverwood emerges as contender for head coach role

England bowling coach Chris Silverwood has emerged as a leading contender to replace Trevor Bayliss as head coach.

Reports linked South African Gary Kirsten to the job but Silverwood could pip him to the role.

The 44-year-old former fast bowler, who played six Tests for England, became bowling coach in January 2018 after leading Essex to their first County Championship title in 25 years the previous summer.

An announcement is expected next week.

The new coach's first assignment in charge of England would be the tour of New Zealand, where two Tests follow five Twenty20 internationals.

They would inherit a team that is the 50-over world champion side and will be looking to do the double at the T20 World Cup in Australia in 2020.

But, as per the instructions of director of cricket Ashley Giles, who has stated that England will place a renewed focus on red-ball cricket, the main objective will be to improve the fortunes of an inconsistent Test team.

It is Giles who is ultimately responsible for the appointment of the new coach - one which could perhaps be a surprise given the wave of support for Kirsten in the past week.

However, Giles did state his preference for appointing an Englishman and endorsed Silverwood's credentials as long ago as February.

Giles looks likely to opt against splitting the head coach's role between the Test and limited-overs sides, with the new head coach presiding over both.

It is understood former England captain Alec Stewart made the shortlist and was invited to a final interview.

However, the Surrey director of cricket withdrew from the reckoning because of the demands of the schedule and the impact on his family.

Bayliss stepped down from the role following this summer's drawn Ashes series against Australia.
https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/49929124
 
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) announced today that it has appointed Chris Silverwood as England Men’s Head Coach.

Silverwood, 44, has been promoted from the role of Bowling Coach and will take charge from Trevor Bayliss, who left the post at the end of the season.

The ECB’s selection panel of Chief Executive Officer Tom Harrison, Managing Director of England’s Men’s Cricket Ashley Giles and Head of Coach Development John Neal unanimously agreed that he was the outstanding candidate for the role having impressed during the interview process and demonstrating his intimate knowledge of the current set-up and systems.

Commenting on the appointment of Silverwood, Ashley Giles, said:

"We are delighted to confirm Chris as England Men’s Head Coach. We have gone through a thorough process and looked at all the options that were available to us. Chris was the standout candidate.

“I believe he is what we need to take our international teams forward. He is somebody we know well, but it is his intimate understanding of our structures and systems and his close relationships with Test captain Joe Root and white-ball captain Eoin Morgan that will help us develop our plans for the next few years.

"He has performed exceptionally well during his role as an assistant coach and has the ultimate respect of the players’ that have worked with him.

“Chris demonstrated in his interview a clear understanding and strategy of how both the red and white ball teams need to evolve. He has some detailed thoughts on what it will take to win the Ashes in Australia and win major ICC white-ball tournaments.

“Over the past couple of years, he has been an integral member of developing the teams’ culture and emerging a cohesive relationship across the team’s management group.

“Chris cares passionately about how we grow and develop the game through the county network. His relationships with the first-class game, in particular County Coaches and Directors of Cricket, will be invaluable. Having led Essex to the County Championship title in 2017, his legacy is very much in evidence this campaign, which saw Essex win the domestic double of the Specsavers County Championship and the Vitality Blast.

“Ultimately, his highest quality is that he is a winner and that will be an important part of the job as we look to strive to become the most respected team in the world across all formats.”

Speaking about his appointment, Silverwood added:

“I am thrilled and honoured to be appointed England Head Coach.

“I aim to continue the great work that has been done over the past five years and build on our future, especially in the Test arena.

“I have enjoyed working with the players over the past two seasons, and developing the best crop of talent in the English game.

“I am excited to get started and build teams’ that the whole game can be proud of. There is a tremendous amount of talent coming through, and there is enormous potential for growth. The hard work starts now, and I am confident we can make a positive impact during our winter tours of New Zealand and South Africa.”

Silverwood’s first competitive series as Head Coach will be England’s tour of New Zealand, which includes a five-match IT20 series starting on November 1 in Christchurch and two Tests against the Black Caps commencing on November 21 at the Bay Oval, Mount Maunganui.

Silverwood played six Tests and seven ODIs for England between 1996 and 2002, but it was on the domestic circuit that the seamer earned his stripes both as a player and coach.

He spent 13 years in his native Yorkshire, before finishing his county career with three seasons at Middlesex. In that time, he took 577 first-class wickets at just under 28 runs-a-piece.

Following his retirement, Silverwood joined the coaching staff at Essex in 2010. He was appointed head coach ahead of the 2016 season, promptly leading them to promotion that same season and then on to the County Championship title the following year. His legacy still evident this year when Essex won the double of the Specsavers County Championship and the T20 Vitality Blast.

At the end of 2017, he accepted the full-time position as England’s Fast Bowling Coach, working with the team throughout the last two seasons, which included a home Test series victory against India in 2018 and the ultimate accolade of this summer’s ICC World Cup win.
 
Breaking : Chris Silverwood named new England Head coach

He replaces Trevor Bayliss as the new England coach after previously being their bowling coach.
 
Is it due to the pressure from some ex cricketers and experts that English coaches are not promoted or purely on merit? I guess only time can tell but he has decent success at domestic level under his belt.
 
Did well with Essex and has good knowledge of the county system unlike Bayliss.

However feel England needed a head coach with a batting background as that's their main weakness in Tests.
 
A mistake by Giles I feel.

But happy to be proven wrong.
 
England's new head coach Chris Silverwood is 'safe pair of hands', says Nasser Hussain

Silverwood has been promoted from his role as England bowling coach, taking over from Trevor Bayliss, who left the job after four years at the conclusion of the tied Ashes series this summer.

The 44-year-old previously led Essex to the County Championship title as head coach in 2017, and managing director of England's Men's Cricket Ashley Giles has described him as "the standout candidate" upon his appointment.

Speaking to Sky Sports News, former England captain Hussain said: "I think it's a good appointment. He's a very solid character, is Chris.

"Wherever he has been as a coach, he has been successful. He went over to Essex when they were in Division Two, took them into Division One and then immediately won the County Championship with them - a side that had been under-performing. He showed his pedigree there.

"He has since moved on to England, and look at the work he has done with the England bowlers - look at someone like Stuart Broad, for example, and the renaissance he's had.

"He's someone who seems to ask the right questions, at the right time. He's that type of coach - he's not an in-your-face type; he's very popular in the England dressing room, already in there with the players.

"He knows the time to say things and not say things. I'm talking bowlers here, but he puts little ideas into their minds and makes it seem like it was almost their idea; his man-management is absolutely first class.

"I'd say he's a safe pair of hands. When one or two others ruled themselves out, I think Ashley Giles went for someone he knows and trusts."

Silverwood played six Tests and seven one-day internationals for England between 1996 and 2002, some of those under Hussain's captaincy.

Hussain describes the Yorkshireman as a "very likeable lad", a quality that he has taken into his coaching, but believes the responsibility of being a head coach will require him to upset a few people from time to time.

"It will be slightly different for him," added Hussain. "When you're bowling coach, you have to be friends - especially with bowlers, who love someone to put an arm around them.

"Silverwood would definitely have been a 'softly, softly' sort, and there's a massive difference between being a friendly bowling coach and being the main man - picking and choosing the times when you need to get hard and tough with your group of players, especially in the Test arena where England have been under-performing.

"That will be a challenge for him. There is no such thing as a popular coach or a popular captain. You're there to make tough decisions and be tough with your team.

"At the moment he is popular, but if he wants to do a good job, he'll have to upset a few as well.

"I know this is not that important but, when I played with him, he was a very, very likeable, down to earth, simple lad, who realised that playing for England was an absolute dream.

"I'm very pleased for him. He has lived that dream as a player and he will now be pinching himself that he is the England coach.

Silverwood has said he is "thrilled" and "honoured" at his appointment, one which sees him become only the second Englishman after Peter Moores to coach the national team on a full-time basis since 1999.

Hussain, however, doesn't believe it particularly matters that he is English, and that he will be judged on his results, just like every other coach before him.

"Just pick the best person," said Hussain. "It doesn't matter where they're from, which country they're from.

"If you look at any business - and it is like a business, the ECB - you pick the best people to employ from all around the world.

"I worked with one in Duncan Fletcher. After Fletcher, came Andy Flower - both from Zimbabwe, both absolutely outstanding coaches, possibly the best two coaches England have ever had.

So, for me, it doesn't really matter where Chris is from, it's his standard of coaching. That's more important.

"He will be judged by his results."

Silverwood's first task as head coach is England's tour of New Zealand, which includes a five-match T20I series starting on November 1, and two Tests, beginning on November 21.

Although there is a World T20 tournament in Australia in just over a year's time, Hussain believes Silverwood's focus should be first on the Test team and, in particular, their poor form overseas.

"In white-ball cricket, we're one-day World Cup champions, runners-up in the World T20 - with another on the horizon," added Hussain. "He needs to address Test match cricket.

"Eoin Morgan virtually takes care of the white-ball side, especially now it looks like he is staying on as captain, at least for the short term. That can carry on, keep progressing, though obviously keep an eye on our white-ball cricket, as other sides will catch up very quickly if you don't.

"But our Test cricket needs to improve, especially away from home - our record at home is still pretty good, we beat India 4-1 last year and drew the Ashes 2-2. We need to win away from home, win the Ashes away from home.

"He also needs to bring through fast bowlers, look for long-term replacements for [James] Anderson and Broad, but the major thing is our top-order batting.

"Our top-order batting has not been great for a number of years now, technically not sound, so I'd like to see a technical coach.

"I don't think Chris is that with the batting - he is more of a bowling coach, so I'd like to see a bit more technical analysis done on players coming in and out of that Test squad."

https://www.skysports.com/cricket/n...ood-is-safe-pair-of-hands-says-nasser-hussain
 
Not particularly happy about this, but we weren’t in those final interviews and it is what it is, I will get behind it for now and we shall see how the results play out on the pitch.
 
I think this is a good choice, my only concern is that players must be so compatible with him by now that it may not be easy for him to get rid of that image; so I hope he comes down hard on the players from the get go to set them straight and then settle down with them
 
New England coach Chris Silverwood says his priority is to help Test captain Joe Root as they target a successful Ashes campaign in Australia in two years' time.

The 44-year-old was this week promoted from fast bowling coach to replace World Cup-winning head coach Trevor Bayliss, who stepped down last month at the end of his contract.

Silverwood will take charge of the tour of New Zealand, which includes a five-match Twenty20 series, starting on November 1, and two Tests.

"I think (there's a good) relationship between myself and the two captains (Root and Eoin Morgan), and I've got a strong relationship with all the players and backroom staff," Silverwood said at his unveiling press conference on Thursday.

"I understand how the system works, how the team works. That continuity is key."

Silverwood said improving the fortunes of the Test team under Root's captaincy would be his top priority.

England won the 50-over World Cup in July for the first time but failed to wrest back the Ashes from Australia, who retained the urn after a 2-2 draw.

Their next Test tour of Australia is in 2021-22.

"Job number one is helping Joe -- we've got a lot of support around Joe, but to keep moving forward so that in two years' time we can go to Australia and make a real impact," he said.

England's aim is to become the most successful team in international cricket across all formats.

Silverwood said the Test team would have to learn to bat for long periods, build on their bowling success and become more consistent away from home.

Ashley Giles, managing director of England men's cricket, explained why he labelled Silverwood "the standout candidate".

"His character, his values, he's a winner," said Giles. "You can only prove that in the environment you're in and he's proven that in the domestic game."

Silverwood, who played six Tests and seven one-day internationals for England between 1996 and 2002, coached Essex to the County Championship title in 2017 before joining the England set-up.

"The job he did at Essex was fantastic and we're still seeing that legacy now. I think the sign of a good coach is leaving the club better than you found it and that seems to be in evidence," Giles said.

"The relationship, the knowledge of what we're doing -- we've got an exceptional bloke who cares deeply about what we're doing."

https://www.afp.com/en/news/824/eng...-targets-ashes-success-under-root-doc-1la8p41
 
England's new head coach Chris Silverwood says Eoin Morgan and James Anderson have earned the right to decide when to retire from the international stage.

Anderson missed the majority of the recent Ashes series against Australia because of a calf injury.

The 37-year-old bowler will still be sidelined for England's tour of New Zealand next month in Silverwood's first assignment since being promoted from bowling coach to succeed Trevor Bayliss.

But in a bid to prove his fitness for the following tour of South Africa, Anderson is training at Manchester City's Etihad Campus over the next two months alongside England's strength and conditioning team.

With 575 Test wickets to his name, a record for a seamer, Anderson is not about to be summarily discarded.

Former Essex coach Silverwood admitted Anderson and Stuart Broad are almost automatic selections provided they are both injury-free.

"If they're both fit, it's difficult to look past them, isn't it? It's a great headache to have. When you look at the amount of wickets they've got between them it's phenomenal," Silverwood said.

"Jimmy's great. He takes wickets, he's got a lot of knowledge in there that he can share with the players coming in.

"I think it will be up to him to let us know, and I think he will, when he's had enough, but who wouldn't want a world-class bowler like him in the line-up? He is phenomenal. He gets wickets all round the world.

"So yes I want him around as long as I can, but equally we've got to be realistic and say 'right we've got to do some future planning here'."

Silverwood seems content to defer to Morgan about when to quit, after the Dubliner presided over England's historic World Cup triumph this year.

The Irish batsman's future as limited-overs captain is uncertain beyond next year's T20 World Cup.

"The way he leads that one-day side and T20 side, and the influence he's got with the players, is phenomenal," Silverwood said.

"He's so respected and the ideas he has, moving them forward. My job is to give him as much support as I can, to help him get where he wants to get to with them.

"He's earned the right to tell us when he's had enough but certainly we've got to have one eye on transitioning that period."

https://www.france24.com/en/20191012-silverwood-won-t-rush-morgan-anderson-into-retirement
 
England Test captain Joe Root says he and new coach Chris Silverwood are "aligned" on a two-year plan to win back the Ashes in Australia.

Root says the team will change their approach, attempting to bat longer and be more patient with the ball.

He also told the BBC's Test Match Special that he hopes to return to batting at number four in England's top order as it "suits his game".

"It definitely fits in with captaincy a little bit better for me," Root said.

"I've found over time that, generally, I've consistently played better in that position."

Root moved up from his preferred position at four for the entirety of the drawn Ashes series in England this summer.

However, his average of 32.5 runs batting at three over the five-match series was 10 runs worse than when he bats a place lower down the order.

"I know previous captains have preferred to get out there early and just get among it but I quite like to split the two and to really focus on my batting."

Silverwood was named successor to Trevor Bayliss as England's head coach in October after initially joining the set-up as bowling coach in January 2018.

And Root says he and the 44-year-old, who led Essex to their first County Championship in 25 years in 2017, have established a sense of "real clarity" over how they will move forward.

It is a departure from the approach taken by Australian Bayliss, who encouraged his team to score aggressively and take quick wickets.

"We know that over the next couple of years, we want to do everything we can to be in the best shape possible to go down to Australia and win," Root said.

"We want to be competitive in the Test Championship and as much as possible climb up the rankings to become the number one team in the world.

"We've got 25 games to build on that journey and make sure when we go down there we're in a really strong position to take on Australia in their conditions."

England face New Zealand in two Tests, the first of which begins on 21 November, but the series does not count towards the ICC World Test Championship.

The tourists continue their preparations in a three-day first-class match against a New Zealand A side, at the Cobham Oval in Whangarei, on Friday.

Bowling all-rounders Sam Curran and Chris Woakes are competing to start the first Test against the Black Caps in Mount Maunganui.

Opener Joe Denly is expected to drop down to three following an ankle injury that ruled him out of the T20 series, replacing Zak Crawley, who scored a century in his first innings in an England shirt earlier this week.

Root added: "We haven't officially picked a team yet. As you'd expect, the majority of that will go and play the first Test match."

https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/50416520
 
Head coach Chris Silverwood is crossing his fingers that James Anderson can end England’s Test summer on a high by claiming a historic 600th wicket and leading the team to victory over Pakistan.

Anderson ended day four of the third Test stranded on 599 after taking the wicket of Abid Ali late on – a breakthrough that might have been a milestone had Jos Buttler have held on to a regulation edge from Shan Masood in the morning session.

A combination of bad light and heavy rain restricted Anderson to 12 overs on Monday and, with a poor forecast for day five, there is a chance he could have to wait even longer to becoming the first paceman in a distinguished club that currently has just three members – Muttiah Muralitharan, Shane Warne and Anil Kumble.

England are also chasing a wider prize – with eight more wickets needed to seal a 2-0 series victory after Pakistan closed 210 runs behind on 100 for two.

Silverwood remains hopeful of a perfect conclusion to two-and-a-half months of training, living and playing in a strictly controlled bubble, with his 38-year-old seamer to the fore.

“It would be fantastic if we could do it. I want to win the game first and foremost but to finish strongly and see Jimmy get his 600th would be fantastic,” he said.

“We’re all aware of the milestone Jimmy is looking at but he’ll get there. Hopefully we’ll see it tomorrow.

“It would be brilliant to see Jimmy get over the line. We’ll wake up in the morning, have a look out the curtains to see what’s out there and, if we get an opportunity, we’ll go for it.

“For the guys to come out and put their best foot forward and finish in the same way we’ve played the last two series would be nice. I’m very proud of how they’ve handled themselves, being locked up for the bets part of 10 weeks in the bubble – their attitude and effort during that time has been fantastic.”

There is little that has not already been said it tribute to Anderson, who has built a 17-year body of work that may never be matched, but as a player who laboured hard for the 11 Test wickets he achieved Silverwood’s appreciation runs deep.

“He’s an inspiration, isn’t he? 600 Test wickets…Wow,” he said.

“He’s worked so hard to do it and he’s brilliant around the place. He’s constantly helping the other bowlers. It’s just superb to have one of the best in the world sat in your dressing room and playing for your country.”

One England player has already taken the field for the final time, with Surrey batsman Ollie Pope landing badly on his left shoulder in the morning session and causing concerns that he has aggravated an old injury that kept him out of the game for several months.

He will leave the bubble for a medical assessment on Tuesday, with Silverwood adding: “Ollie’s banged his shoulder again so he’ll go for a scan on that. We’ll assess from there.”

https://www.bt.com/sport/news/2020/...n-james-anderson-as-he-nears-600-test-wickets
 
England may continue with their rest and rotation selection policy during the Ashes later this year if biosecurity restrictions are still in place for their tour to Australia.

All of England’s three-format players have been given a break during their winter Tests in Asia, with team management wary of player burnout given the jam-packed schedule and restrictions on movement due to the pandemic.

Following their Test series defeat to India, England’s star players will next play the limited-overs leg of the tour before taking part in the Indian Premier League, a busy home summer comprising of seven Tests and 12 white-ball internationals, scheduled tours of Bangladesh and Pakistan, the T20 World Cup in India and then the Ashes at the end of the year.

The likes of Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler and Jofra Archer have all been rested from Test matches in the past two months and England coach Chris Silverwood said that policy could still be in place for the Ashes if restrictions on travel and movement remain.

"I don't think it's acceptable to push somebody until they break and then try and pick them up,” Silverwood said.

“We have to make the intervention before anybody does break so we can get them back in an England shirt quicker.

"Equally, everyone misses their family. The families miss the players that are here. If we can't get the families to the players as we normally would, it's important we do our best to get the players to the families. From a well-being point of view, it's so important these players stay connected with their families.

"Will the policy continue into the English summer? It's certainly something we have to be aware of and consider because we don't know what the landscape will look like from a Covid point of view.

"Could players be flying home midway through the Ashes? We have to be proactive in looking after them, so it's certainly something that we may have to look at, yes.

"I know things are slowly opening up, but we will be guided by the medical advice and what's happening in the country. It's certainly something that we are probably going to have around."

Meanwhile, England's medical staff are investigating Archer's ongoing elbow problems, with Silverwood revealing that the issue could require "long term" management.

Archer played two Tests in England's 3-1 series defeat by India, but was unavailable for the second and fourth games after pain in his right elbow.

The paceman has experienced problems with the joint ever since the triumphant 2019 World Cup, breaking down on the subsequent tour of South Africa and later being diagnosed with a stress fracture.

He is currently back in training ahead of the Twenty20 series and is signed up for a full IPL stint with the Rajasthan Royals, but it is his fitness to withstand the rigours of five-day cricket that will be occupying England's minds.

Archer is seen as the future leader of the red-ball attack, once James Anderson and Stuart Broad eventually pass the torch, and is inked into play a central role in the Ashes.

"I wouldn't say (I'm) concerned, no, but his elbow did flare up a little bit and the medical staff are managing that at the moment," said Silverwood.

"Obviously we'll monitor his progress. The medical staff are talking about how we deal with this long-term. It's not something I would go out and predict but we'll find out in the course of time, won't we?

"I'm not sure surgery has come up yet, I'll be guided by the medics on that.”

Regardless of fitness, there is a chance Archer will not be part of England's next Test side. The dates of the IPL season were officially announced on Sunday, with the final set for May 30.

That is earlier than initially predicted but any England players involved in the knockout stages would still be unable to take on New Zealand at Lord's on June 2.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/eng...ris-silverwood-jofra-archer-injury/2021-03-08
 
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