Darren Gough questions Brendon McCullum’s future after England’s Ashes humiliation

May 21, 2026
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Darren Gough questions Brendon McCullum’s future after England’s Ashes humiliation

Former England fast bowler Darren Gough has shared strong views on the current direction of England cricket following the team’s disappointing Ashes campaign in Australia. Speaking on The Overlap’s Stick to Cricket podcast, Gough discussed several major topics, including England’s coaching setup, the ECB’s recent selection decisions, and the growing disconnect between county cricket and the national side.

While discussing England’s current approach under Brendon McCullum, Gough acknowledged that he enjoys the aggressive “Bazball” brand of cricket but believes the team now requires greater discipline and toughness in pressure situations. The former pacer further explained that England’s fearless style cannot always compensate for poor decision-making and lack of consistency, particularly in overseas conditions against elite teams like Australia national cricket team.

“I think Baz McCullum is realistically very lucky to carry on as England’s head coach. If you’re not winning games your job is going to come under scrutiny. I like the way they play but it needs toning down a bit. We need a bit of steel,” Gough said.

England entered the Ashes series with massive expectations but were consistently outplayed by Australia’s experienced bowling attack and tactical discipline. The defeat has once again intensified debates around whether England’s ultra-attacking philosophy is sustainable across all conditions.

Gough also spoke emotionally about missing out on the England national selector role after the England and Wales Cricket Board appointed former Australia batter Marcus North instead. The ex-Yorkshire director admitted the decision genuinely hurt him because he believed his years of experience in English cricket could have helped rebuild stronger links between the national setup and county system.

“I was disheartened. I’ll be honest, it did hurt me. I could have challenged them in the right areas. I’m mature now, I’m not like I was 10 years ago, a hothead. I’ve mellowed a lot, I’ve managed people. My honest opinion was, if they went down the route of someone who’d played for England, who has done all the roles in the game, I might just get this,” he said.

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England’s current selection group already includes several influential figures such as Rob Key, Ben Stokes, Harry Brook and McCullum. Gough believes adding an Australian selector further distances the national setup from the domestic system.

“They’re saying they are trying to bring England cricket and county cricket closer together, I don’t think they are because we’ve got a Kiwi coach and we’ve now got an Australian selector. I don’t think that’s brought the game closer to the county game at all. I do think there’s a big, big repair job there.” Gough remarked.

The debate around England’s direction is expected to continue following the disappointing Ashes campaign, with increasing scrutiny on whether McCullum’s philosophy can consistently deliver results at the highest level.

Also READ: Alice Capsey shines as England outclass New Zealand in the first Women’s T20I

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