Bayliss backs Farbrace to succeed him as England coach

Farbrace worked under Bayliss when the Australian was head coach of Sri Lanka before taking charge of the Lankans himself in 2013.

Published : Jun 26, 2018 00:40 IST , Manchester, United Kingdom

Bayliss has long made it clear he will be standing down next year and he believes Farbrace, a 50-year-old Englishman, is well-placed to take over.
Bayliss has long made it clear he will be standing down next year and he believes Farbrace, a 50-year-old Englishman, is well-placed to take over.
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Bayliss has long made it clear he will be standing down next year and he believes Farbrace, a 50-year-old Englishman, is well-placed to take over.

Trevor Bayliss has backed longtime assistant Paul Farbrace to succeed him as England coach when he stands down after next year's World Cup and Ashes.

Farbrace worked under Bayliss when the Australian was head coach of Sri Lanka before taking charge of the Lankans himself in 2013.

The pair were reunited again when Bayliss was appointed prior to the 2015 Ashes that England went on to win on home soil.

Bayliss has long made it clear he will be standing down next year and he believes Farbrace, a 50-year-old Englishman, is well-placed to take over.

Last week saw England announce that former Kent and Middlesex wicket-keeper Farbrace would be in charge for the Twenty20 international at Edgbaston that ends Australia's tour on Wednesday and the three subsequent T20 internationals with India early next month -- an appointment that will allow Bayliss to run the rule over promising county players.

Asked if Farbrace could succeed him on a permanent basis, Bayliss replied: “Definitely. If that's what he wants to do, then I'm all for it.”

Bayliss said his short break from coaching the national side in all three formats, and Farbrace's temporary spell in charge, were both agreed with England and Wales Cricket Board director Andrew Strauss six months ago.

“Straussy spoke to me... with that in mind, to give Farby some exposure with the top team,” said Bayliss of a conversation with the former England captain.

“He's had success doing it before...this is an opportunity to get that experience.”

Meanwhile Bayliss will head into his short break on the back of overseeing England's first 5-0 series win against his native Australia in any format in more than 140 years of international cricket between the arch-rival.

'Unbelievable' Buttler

But the sweep was only made possible by Jos Buttler's superb 110 not out in the fifth one-day international at Old Trafford on Sunday.

England was in dire straits at 114 for eight, chasing a seemingly modest 206 to win against reigning world champion Australia, only for Buttler to turn the game on its head with a superbly constructed century.

This season has also seen the wicketkeeper-batsman restored to the Test side in one of the most eye-catching moves by Ed Smith, England's new national selector.

“It's unbelievable,” said Bayliss of Buttler's unbeaten hundred.

“I can't really describe how good it is. Red ball, white ball, T20 -- there are not too many better in the world at the minute.”

Bayliss has coached the likes of Sri Lanka great Kumar Sangakkara but added that Buttler lost little in comparison.

“He's right up there in the top echelon -- a bit different to some of the guys I've worked with before, but he's devastating.

“He can play that role he did (at Old Trafford), in smart fashion -- but when he needs to he knows he can pull the power out and put the foot down.”

England, for all it is the top-ranked side in men's ODI cricket, has yet to win the men's World Cup and Bayliss said Sunday's dramatic success was a timely “reminder” to the 2019 tournament host that it is not the finished article.

“We still have work to do,” he said. “If we didn't have work to do we wouldn't have been 114 for eight. To me that's a bit of a reminder that there are still some things to work on.

“The good thing is we were able to win eventually from a poor position. To get a win from that situation will give Jos and the rest of the guys a blueprint of how to go about it, and the confidence to know that we can do it,” he added.

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