‘We are a very good team on flat wickets’: Brendon McCullum says England struggle to adapt but have ‘no excuses’ for Ashes 2025

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England head coach Brendon McCullum says they are a very good team on flat wickets. (Reuters)England head coach Brendon McCullum says they are a very good team on flat wickets. (Reuters)

England head coach Brendon McCullum wore his candid self when he admitted that his team struggled to acclimatise to challenging overseas conditions and was a “very, very good” team when presented with flat batting wickets.

The Bazball philosophy at home over the last three years has hinged largely on this template to outscore visiting teams on flatter wickets, putting oppositions under pressure. However, England are yet to turn those positives into silverware and their cricket in the ODI format has suffered a staggering slump since the last World Cup. England failed to bat out 50 overs in any of the three ODIs recently in New Zealand, suffering a 0-3 clean-sweep. Since the 2023 World Cup, England have lost six of the seven series they have played, four coming away from home.

However, McCullum would not have any excuses for his team when they set up to face Australia in the high-stakes Ashes opener in Perth, starting November 21.

“With the prep that we’ve had with the other Test guys who’ve been here for a while too, we’ll have no excuses come Australia,” McCullum was quoted as saying by Fox Sports.

McCullum said England struggled to compete and adapt in overseas conditions which presented a bit of seam, swing or turn.

Incredible on flat wickets

“I think when we’re confronted with good, flat wickets, we’re a very, very good cricket team,” McCullum said.

“I think we play a high-octane style of cricket and those conditions suit us. When the wickets have a little bit in them and they’re a bit more challenging, whether that be spin or seam or swing, we probably can’t quite adapt our tempo quick enough,” admitted the former Kiwi captain.

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“We’ve got some talented players but, unfortunately, our performances at the moment in this form of the game aren’t quite up to scratch and we need to rectify that.”

“One-day cricket is clearly the area we need to improve, and my comments are more directed at one-day cricket. I think when we do come across the trickier conditions in Australia and Test cricket, we have a pretty good understanding of how we’re going to go about it.

England have opted against a practice game ahead of the first Test but McCullum maintains that the challenge for the series will be immense.

“I’m proper excited,” he said. “We’re incredibly respectful of the challenge Australia is going to present us and we know how hard that tour is going to be.

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“It’s going to require a team to stay together right throughout, to be as strong as we can to try and block out any of the outside noise,” he added.

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