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Michael Vaughan questions the timing of Ben Stokes' recent interview, suggesting it was unnecessary and highlighted underlying issues within the England cricket team. Vaughan also criticized the England cricket hierarchy's recent presentations as lacking substance.
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Over recent weeks, the England cricket hierarchy has been at pains to show it learnt lessons from a dismal Ashes in Australia. Chief executive Richard Gould, director Rob Key and captain Ben Stokes have led a charm offensive aimed at showing they really do care about county cricket, that they will not be giving failing England players any more leeway, and that preparing for a Test series might actually be a good thing.
Stokes grabbed more attention this week with another interview to the ECB website, in which he insisted his relationship with head coach Brendon McCullum is not strained by a difference of opinion on Englandâs approach, and that they are â95 per cent alignedâ.
All of which has left former England captain Michael Vaughan perplexed. âI have no idea why that interview was released,â Vaughan says. âI donât think thereâd have been one person waking up that morning thinking, âOh, Ben and Baz have got an issueâ. Two hours later, that interview gets released, and itâs clear that theyâve had a bit of a problem in the winter.â
Vaughan was not convinced by Key and Gouldâs PowerPoint presentation to the media at Lordâs which attempted to lay out Englandâs next steps and was dismissed as âmanagement speakâ in some quarters. âThe corporate messaging was just corporate messaging,â says Vaughan. âSlideshows for slideshowsâ sake, just to try and prove that theyâre becoming more of an attention-to-detail organisation.
âIf they really wanted to put on a front then Ben Stokes, Rob Key and Baz McCullum should have been presenting those slides in front of the media. I have no idea why Richard Gould was talking about cricket. Heâs the CEO. Heâs what I call the bean counter of the game, and looks after the finances.â
Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum insist they will be keeping a keen eye on the County Championship (Robbie Stephenson/PA)
The question now is whether England will really change. Can the bridge between the County Championship and the England Test team be rebuilt after it was left to decay for four years?
Michael Vaughan criticized the interview for being unnecessary and for revealing underlying issues within the England cricket team.
Ben Stokes stated that he is '95 per cent aligned' with head coach Brendon McCullum, denying any strain in their relationship.
Michael Vaughan dismissed the presentation by the England cricket hierarchy as 'management speak' and lacking genuine substance.
The key figures include chief executive Richard Gould, director Rob Key, and captain Ben Stokes.

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There are certainly places up for grabs when England take on New Zealand at Lordâs in June, in the first of three Tests. Zak Crawleyâs position as an opener is in serious doubt. The bowling unit is not set in stone. Vaughan, who is speaking to promote the Barclays Knight-Stokes Cup, a new national hardball competition for state schools, believes there must be changes at both ends of the line-up if England are to start afresh.
âThey need tone-setters with bat and ball, so they need someone who opens the batting with Ben Duckett. You canât expect to be the No 1 team in the world with someone who averages 31 from 64 games [Crawley]. We need to get away from just selecting players because they play in the vibe this era has created. Your opening batters have got to average over 40.
âAnd then Iâd be looking at someone like Ollie Robinson. With the new ball in Australia they were poor, and they need someone thatâs going to set the tone. England needs to sit with Ollie and if itâs a mental thing, if itâs a fitness thing, if itâs an attitude problem that Ollie Robinson has, England have to iron it out. Theyâre not a good enough team to just put someone like Ollie Robinson on the scrap heap. You look at his numbers in Test match cricket, theyâre up there.â
Vaughan at the launch of the Barclays Knight-Stokes Cup at Lord's this week (Jed Leicester)
There is plenty of time for County Championship players to catch the eye, with four more rounds of games before McCullum and Stokes pick their side. But there is already a familiar name at the top of the run scoring charts: Jamie Smith had an Ashes to forget with the bat and the gloves, but he has made a brilliant start to the season at Surrey, scoring two centuries in two matches batting at three.
The concern with Smith is that his teammate Ben Foakes is Surreyâs preferred wicketkeeper. Smith is likely to retain his place in the England Test team, even after some brainless shots Down Under, but his glovework needs attention. Vaughan says it is time for him to knuckle down and learn the art of the keeper, even if that means taking matters into his own hands.
âHeâs obviously not keeping for Surrey, which is a problem for me. Like Shoaib Bashir, he wasnât getting in his county team but heâs England spinner, that canât be right. But [Smith] should play because heâs too good ⊠His battingâs going to be fine at seven â Iâm sure heâll end up maybe at six in time.
âBut I just look at Matthew Prior, when he first started for England as a wicketkeeper-batter, and his keeping was a little bit flawed, and suddenly he went and worked away with [former England wicketkeeper] Bruce French, worked his nuts off every morning and drilled and caught loads of balls and became a brilliant wicketkeeper-batter. I look at Jamie Smith and think, âGo on, take a leaf out of Priorâs bookâ.â
England were criticised for their lack of specialist coaches at the Ashes, with only a temporary bowling coach and no fielding coach on the tour, during which they dropped 18 catches. There was also no keeping coach to work with directly Smith on his struggles behind the stumps.
Jamie Smith has been in sublime form for his county this month (Getty)
âThe coaching has to get better, itâs as simple as that,â adds Vaughan. âBaz McCullum has got to coach the team and he needs to bring in expertise. And if Jamie Smith is working with Alex Stewart or Bruce French, whoever, Jack Russell, that wicketkeeper coach should be around the England team for the preparation days. And if I was the coach of England, which Iâm not, Iâd be fine with players bringing in their own coaches to make sure that theyâre ready for the Thursday start.
âIâve never, ever seen a keeper improve by not catching balls. You have to do all the drills. You have to catch loads of balls, and thatâs on the Tuesday morning, the Wednesday morning, the Thursday morning, the Friday morning. Every single keeper that I see that gets to the top in their profession are catching balls all the time. I just need to see a bit more of that.â
Over a thousand teams have sign up for the chance to play at Lordâs as stars encourage greater access to cricket in state schools. Find out more here.