Cricket Jan 02, 2026

The Ashes 2025/26: Brendon McCullum concedes England future in hands of others after 11-day series defeat

👤
By Admin
Sports Journalist
The Ashes 2025/26: Brendon McCullum concedes England future in hands of others after 11-day series defeat

Brendon McCullum is eager to stay on as England's head coach but admits his future is "up to other people" after losing the Ashes in just 11 days.

The New Zealander branded this winter's tour of Australia as "the biggest series of all our lives" but saw his hopes of delivering the urn evaporate after humbling defeats in Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide.

McCullum's predecessor, Chris Silverwood, did not survive a 4-0 thrashing four years ago and questions are already being asked about who should carry the can for the latest defeat Down Under.

McCullum is keen to pick up the pieces from a desperate trip and be part of the rebuild but understands that his fate lies in the hands of others.

Asked if he would still be in charge at the start of the English summer, he said: "I don't know. It's not really up to me, is it?

"I'll just keep trying to do the job, try to learn the lessons that we haven't quite got right here and try to make some adjustments. Those questions are for someone else, not for me.

"Sometimes you don't win, and then those decisions are up to other people. It's a pretty good gig, it's good fun. You travel the world with the lads and try to play some exciting cricket and try to achieve some things.

"I don't do anything to protect the job, for me it's a matter of trying to just get the very best out of the people and try to achieve what you can with them. I'm enjoying the time that I've got with these guys and I think we've made some progress from when I took over to where we are.

"We're not the finished article, but I think we've definitely improved as a cricket team. We've had an identity about us.

"You're always looking at what you've got right and what you've got wrong, and you're not too ignorant to admit - or too arrogant either - that you get some things wrong. (It's OK) as long as you don't keep making the same mistakes."

There are two more games left, starting in Melbourne on Boxing Day before moving on to Sydney for the New Year Test. Lose both and it may become impossible for any of the key decision-makers to hold off the tide.

That means they are anything but dead rubbers for a management team and a squad looking to save their international careers.

"Now's the time for us, in the last two Tests, to really show our identity," McCullum said.

"What I'm trying to achieve with this team, and what the skipper's trying to achieve, is to try and finish this tour with some pride salvaged from what's been pretty disappointing so far.

"I'll always have the back of my players, and always support them, and I'll always make sure that I'm protective of them as well in a public forum. That doesn't mean you don't challenge privately, but in a public forum, you're always protective.

"I wouldn't imagine anything would change in the coming days as we look to try and salvage something from this. I have conviction in the style of cricket that I try to get the teams to play, with the players that you've got who are suited to it."

Sir Andrew Strauss, the last England captain to win an away Ashes series 15 years ago, has warned removing McCullum or captain Ben Stokes would not be enough to change a "depressingly one-sided story" in Australia.

Strauss wrote: "So there it is, another ambitious set of England cricketers made the journey to Australia, full of hope and optimism only for their dreams to come crashing down around them after only 11 days of cricket.

"McCullum and Stokes will come under extreme scrutiny for the decisions they took in preparation for this tour in the same way that (Ashley) Giles and (Chris) Silverwood did after the last tour. And Andy Flower after 2013-14 and Duncan Fletcher after 2006/07.

"While they will know that this goes with the territory, none of the above are responsible for England losing so incredibly consistently in Australia since 1986-87. We have been badly mauled time after time over there because Australia are a better team, served by a better high performance system.

"If we are genuinely serious about changing this depressingly one-sided story, then we need to look beyond sacking England coaches and captains and ask whether we are genuinely willing to make the changes necessary to break the trend."

Australia lead five-match series 3-0

Tags:

cricket news

Share this article

Related Posts

England men cricket fixtures and results 2026: T20 World Cup, plus games vs India, Pakistan, New Zealand and more

England men cricket fixtures and results 2026: T20 World Cup, plus games vs India, Pakistan, New Zealand and more

Full fixtures for England's men's side in 2026, including the T20 World Cup and home white-ball series against India.All times UK and Ireland 🕰️

Men's T20 World Cup 2026 squads: England, India, Pakistan, Australia, Ireland, West Indies, South Africa, Italy and more

Men's T20 World Cup 2026 squads: England, India, Pakistan, Australia, Ireland, West Indies, South Africa, Italy and more

Check out the squads for the 2026 Men's T20 World Cup, which takes place in India and Sri Lanka from February 7 to March 8, live on Your Site.India: S...

England Women cricket fixtures and results 2026: T20 World Cup, India Test match at Lord's and more

England Women cricket fixtures and results 2026: T20 World Cup, India Test match at Lord's and more

Full fixtures for England's women's side in 2026, including the home T20 World Cup.All times UK and Ireland 🕰️

England T20 World Cup squad: Jofra Archer and Josh Tongue named in provisional group for 2026 tournament but no Jamie Smith or Brydon Carse

England T20 World Cup squad: Jofra Archer and Josh Tongue named in provisional group for 2026 tournament but no Jamie Smith or Brydon Carse

Jofra Archer has been included in England's provisional T20 World Cup squad after his Ashes-ending injury, with fellow fast bowler Josh Tongue also na...

The Ashes: England's Gus Atkinson ruled out of fifth and final Test as tourists lose third fast bowler to injury

The Ashes: England's Gus Atkinson ruled out of fifth and final Test as tourists lose third fast bowler to injury

Gus Atkinson has been ruled out of the final Ashes Test, leaving England three bowlers down as they close the series in Sydney.Atkinson pulled up whil...

The Ashes: England's MCG win shows how different series vs Australia could have been, say Sky Sports' Michael Atherton and Nasser Hussain

The Ashes: England's MCG win shows how different series vs Australia could have been, say Sky Sports' Michael Atherton and Nasser Hussain

England's "hollow" Ashes victory in Melbourne brought about feelings of "huge frustration" as it showed just how different the series could have been...