Guernsey Press

Taking on the world: The Kiwi who played his part in bringing glory to England

Brendon McCullum was the inspiration for England’s 2019 triumph, according to white-ball captain Eoin Morgan.

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Before he even starts work as England’s Test coach, Brendon McCullum can already claim to have left an indelible legacy on the country’s cricketing fortunes.

The dramatic World Cup victory in 2019 stands as the crowning achievement of the English game in recent years and its inspiration, according to the man who lifted the trophy at Lord’s, was McCullum.

Eoin Morgan forged a close bond with his Kiwi counterpart during their time as IPL team-mates with Kolkata Knight Riders and left an influence which would later see England go from one-day walkovers to white-ball world beaters.

McCullum’s men were the blueprint for the fearless, proactive unit Morgan’s England would become.

England's Eoin Morgan (right) shakes hands with McCullum
England’s Eoin Morgan (right) shakes hands with McCullum (Anthony Devlin/PA)

In a pre-tournament interview with the BBC, he explained: “If you look at his body language at any stage of any game, it’s extremely positive. He’s always on the front foot and leading from the front, regardless of the scoreboard or the situation of the game.

“New Zealand had embodied playing fun cricket under McCullum. Playing against them, we were a little bit jealous.”

Now, having inspired England’s limited-overs renaissance from a distance, the 40-year-old from Dunedin has direct responsibility for lifting the Test team from a similarly low ebb. He has been handed the reins despite never previously coaching at first-class level, let alone internationally.

McCullum grew up at a cricket ground, with father Stuart a good enough player to make 76 appearances for Otago in New Zealand’s domestic competition.

He would later recall that his Dad’s match fees were modest enough to cover little more than “a pie, a pint and a punt”, but was himself destined for bigger things.

The big stage was beckoning, although it was initially unclear if it would be rugby or cricket that claimed him. He was adept enough with the oval ball to be selected ahead of future All Black great Dan Carter for the South Island schools side in 2000, but soon settled on his course.

All Black great Dan Carter was once benched for McCullum as a schoolboy.
All Black great Dan Carter was once benched for McCullum as a schoolboy (David Davies/PA)

“I was proud to be called brash, aggressive and perhaps even arrogant,” he told the congregation at Lord’s.

His elevation to captaincy, a controversial decision which led to one of his most illustrious predecessors – Martin Crowe – burning his blazer in outrage, precipitated a wholesale change of heart and outlook.

He became one of the most reliably box-office cricketers on the circuit, smashing a swashbuckling 158 not out in the first ever IPL fixture, making a Test triple century against India and doing as much as anyone to redefine the parameters of the ODI format.

A world Cup win would have been a fitting crowning achievement, but his side stumbled against rivals Australia in the final of the 2015 tournament.

Instead, he bowed out from the international stage in remarkable fashion a year later, smashing the fastest Test century in history in just 54 balls against Australia.

After earning his coaching spurs on the franchise circuit, with Trinidad in the Caribbean Premier League and KKR in the IPL, McCullum is once again ready to take on the world.

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