CENTURION: By the time Trevor Bayliss took over as England’s cricket coach, after a World Cup in which the team were the tournament’s laughing stock, the winds of change had already cleared some of the dressing-room gloom. Paul Farbrace, who had been Bayliss’s deputy when Sri Lanka reached the final of the World Twenty20 in 2009, was the man managing transition, and he had already loosened the straitjackets that had doomed the Peter Moores regime.
Bayliss came with a stellar resume. Less than two years after reaching that World T20 final at Lord’s, he took Sri Lanka to a World Cup final in Mumbai, where only an unprecedented run chase from India denied them the trophy. After that, and a successful stint with the Sydney Sixers in the Big Bash League, he took over a side that was even more of a joke than England’s World Cup team.
The Kolkata Knight Riders started off with a movie star owner, Shah Rukh Khan, and a local hero, Sourav Ganguly, as captain. John Buchanan, whose coaching reputation plummeted like the global stock markets in 2008 once he left Australia, then experimented with the idea of multiple captains during the IPL’s second season. That was as effective as a lead balloon.
Under Bayliss, and with the side now led by the combative Gautam Gambhir, Kolkata won the IPL twice in three seasons. Bayliss was not prone to the eccentricities of his predecessor. Instead, he empowered his stars to take responsibility. Freed from quixotic ideas and playing without fear, they went from being a team others mocked to one that they wanted to emulate.
When he was appointed to the England post, the mandate was clearly to win the biggest prize in the white-ball game, the World Cup. Since reaching the final for the third time in 1992, England have not even made the last four, with each outing more embarrassing than the last.
The numbers have certainly vindicated the appointment. Despite the Champions Trophy disappointment, where they were undone by an inspired Pakistan in the semifinal, England’s win-loss record under Bayliss, 32-13, is the best of any team, better than India (30-16) and South Africa (27-13). Australia, the world champions, who England crushed at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday on the back of Jason Roy’s dazzling 180, are way behind (25-22).
“Trevor’s been fantastic for us, he creates a brilliant atmosphere around the team which allows people to go out and play in that free fashion,” Jos Buttler told the BBC recently. “He doesn’t miss a beat, he sees everything that goes on and his great strength is he’s a great man manager. He really looks after people and gives them confidence. Any coach who can make the player feel 10 feet tall when they go out is fantastic.”
Why then is there so much unease over Bayliss recently announcing that he would leave the job after the 2019 World Cup and home Ashes? That’s easily explained. The hardcore of English cricket support, who follow the team around the world at considerable expense, enjoy the one-day jinks, but it is Test cricket that really matters to them.
And in that arena, Bayliss’s England have been poor. The 4-0 Ashes drubbing followed a 4-0 hammering in India the previous winter. But for an Ashes win immediately after he took over and home and away successes against a South Africa side managing some tricky transformation issues, England just haven’t been good enough. The win-loss ratio (15-18) leaves them trailing way behind the leading trio of India, South Africa and Australia.
Worse still, the one player to have improved as a Test cricketer under Bayliss, Ben Stokes, is now in limbo. And the selection of the Test squad to New Zealand suggests that the authorities aren’t really bothered by the downturn in red-ball form. After an Ashes series where all the leading lights apart from Jimmy Anderson failed — Alastair Cook’s double-hundred with the series already lost should not get too many brownie points — it is the fringe players that have paid the price.
Gary Ballance is gone without even playing a game, Jake Ball after just one in Brisbane. Tom Curran, who had the misfortune to bowl on the two most sluggish surfaces while showing plenty of gumption with the bat, is also omitted.
Time was when an Ashes debacle resulted in the kind of purge that accompanies revolutions. By burying their head in the sand after this latest disaster, English cricket’s decision-makers have clearly shown that it is the white ball that is uppermost in their thoughts.
ODI-focussed England bury their head in the sand over Ashes debacle
ODI-focussed England bury their head in the sand over Ashes debacle
McPeek calls on multiple Saudi champion Alfouraidi
- Local hero to partner Very Connected in Saudi Derby at King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Saturday Feb. 14
RIYADH: Legendary American trainer Kenny McPeek has chosen multiple Saudi Arabian Champion Jockey Adel Alfouraidi to team up with his Very Connected (US) in the group three Saudi Derby presented by ZOOD Realty at King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Saturday Feb. 14.
The Kentucky Derby-winning handler decided to go with the local knowledge and expertise of Alfouraidi, according to a recent release.
McPeek, who recently starred in the hit Netflix horseracing documentary, “Race For The Crown,” said: “I offered the ride to Joel Rosario but he already had a ride, so I offered it to (Jose) Ortiz but his Saudi Cup mount scratched and he isn’t going now.
“So I didn’t know who to use and was fiddling around looking at options.”
McPeek, a multiple grade one-winning trainer, added: “I didn’t know if it was best to use a rider who knows the track and the conformation there, or use a rider who knows the horse, and I decided to find a local rider.”
“Adel is the leading rider there and has been champion jockey. He’s a young gun, has talent, knows the place and has got two weeks to get to know the horse too.
“I have told him to get familiarized with Very Connected. He can go and see him any time and my staff will look after him and he will ride work on him, then he can go and do his thing in the race itself.
“I wasn’t sure which jockeys would be coming from the US and this way I don’t have a worry about a jockey getting off a long flight and travelling internationally.”
Very Connected is a son of Connect (US), whose one win in six starts came in a Churchill maiden and was last seen running fifth in the Listed Gun Runner Stakes at Fair Grounds in December.
Of the horse’s Saudi Derby claims, McPeek said: “He is an outside chance. He needs early pace and he should get it. The longer stretch will suit him and if he gets pace in the first part of the race he will be running on late.”
The winner of the Saudi Derby will earn 30 points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby.
McPeek will be represented once again in The Saudi Cup with Rattle N Roll (US), another son of Connect, and the Lexington-based handler has reasons to believe he can improve on last year’s fifth-place finish behind Forever Young (JPN).
On that occasion Rattle N Roll, who is part owned by Saudi Arabia businessman Sharaf Al-Hariri, qualified by winning The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup a month earlier.
This time he will have had a nine-week spell after taking the Listed Tinsel Stakes at Oaklawn Park on Dec. 12, 2025.
“I think he will run much better and behind Forever Young it is a wide-open race,” added McPeek.
“If Forever Young doesn’t run his best then it won’t be a surprise to see him run really well as I have never had him better and I am excited. His races are spaced out better this year, he’s a hard knocker and he holds his form well.”
McPeek is unsure if he will make the journey on this occasion after recent surgery to his neck and back.
He added: “I really enjoyed my visit last year but I don’t think I can make it this time. The people were so kind and generous and it was a great experience.”









