England team back Cook for captaincy

UNDER FIRE: Alastair Cook has admitted that he could relinquish the captaincy after the 4-0 Test series loss to India. Photo: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

UNDER FIRE: Alastair Cook has admitted that he could relinquish the captaincy after the 4-0 Test series loss to India. Photo: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

Published Dec 22, 2016

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England insist they want Alastair Cook to stay on as captain up to and including next winter's Ashes. The clamour for change from outside the England camp has become deafening but Paul Farbrace is voicing unequivocal backing on behalf of all the players and management staff on the tour of India, which ended in a crushing 4-0 defeat.

Cook has already headed home to consider his future as captain beyond the record 59 Tests in which he has already led his country, before a new-year meeting with England and Wales Cricket Board director Andrew Strauss.

Farbrace concedes questions about the leadership are inevitable after such a comprehensive defeat - albeit against the world's number one team, who have become invincible at home over the past four years.

But he left no room for any doubt that he, coach Trevor Bayliss and Cook's team-mates want him in charge of what they all still believe - despite the hammering in India - is an improving squad.

"If he chooses to step down, that would be a shame because we want him to carry on," said Farbrace. "When you lose a series 4-0, of course people will talk about the leadership. We all know that.

"We would all, at the end of this series, be having a think about what we can do better, what we have learned from this series, and what we need to do to make this team win. But there's nobody looking round the dressing room thinking 'ooh, I wonder who's in charge?'. It's very clear who's in charge, and that hasn't changed."

Farbrace acknowledges it is possible England may have to get used to a change of leader, with vice-captain Joe Root the only feasible alternative - but that is not his preferred option.

"When Straussy and Cookie sit down and have that chat, if it's decided that Cookie isn't the man to lead the team going forward, then there is still plenty of time before the first series in the summer," he said.

"(But) we know he still has the support of the team, and he's a very popular bloke and very popular captain. We knew this was going to be a tough series. There's nothing in this series that suggests he's lost his way as a captain or doesn't still have the support of the team. 

"He's captain, everybody knows where they stand with him so there's absolutely no uncertainty whatsoever within our team. The uncertainty is outside of our team."

Until the man himself or Strauss tells anyone different, then, it will be full steam ahead for Captain Cook Down Under again.

"We've planned, and have been planning, for Cookie to be captain going to the Ashes in Australia next winter," said Farbrace.

"Personally, I hope that continues. The most important thing is that Cookie will make the decision based on what's right for England cricket, not what's right for Alastair Cook.

"Right back to the last time in Australia (in 2013-14), he could quite easily have walked away from it. He didn't - and one of the things that's driven him on is he feels his team is an improving one. We all think that as well."

They are not in denial, though, about the obvious shortcomings demonstrated by the unequal struggle in India - where in their own conditions, the home spinners and batsmen were a class apart.

England briefly raised expectations by dominating the opening draw in Rajkot, but came down to earth with four successive defeats - losing their last six wickets for 15 runs on the final day in Chennai to be trounced by an innings and 75 runs.

Farbrace said: "Again that sums up our series really - one fantastic session, when (Cook and Keaton Jennings) played really well, and then we've lost wickets throughout the rest of the day.

"We've played some very good cricket in spells - what we haven't been able to do is string together days and complete Test matches, other than the first Test.

"You get what you deserve if you can't compete and string together high-quality days of Test cricket - we got what we deserved in the end."

The Independent

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