Eoin Morgan has more power than Joe Root: Michael Vaughan

Former England skipper Michael Vaughan has alleged that all the powers of an English captain are vested into the limited-overs skipper Eoin Morgan, who could choose the team he wants. 

“It is very clear where the leadership power lies in English cricket – it is with Eoin Morgan and not Joe Root,” Vaughan wrote in his column for The Telegraph. 

Saying that Morgan could easily get what he wants, Vaughan feels that it might not be good in the longer run, that one captain be treated all-powerful and one format is given more preference than others. 

“I understand rotation. Nobody argues against the fact players need breaks from Covid bubbles but the frustration for me as a lover of the game’s longest format is why has our Test team been weakened this winter, yet the Twenty20 side is at full strength?” questioned the Ashes-winning skipper. 

Putting emphasis on the fact that Morgan winning the World Cup has made him ‘bombproof’, Vaughan, feels that this power might harm English cricket interests in the longer run. 

“As much as he is a brilliant captain, it is wrong for Morgan to always get what he wants because understandably he will prioritise what is good for his team, and inevitably that will be at the expense of something else,” said the 44-year-old.

“If England do not manage this situation differently in the future, and if I hear they have to rotate during the Ashes series, then I’m afraid we are in some dark days indeed.

“If there is one team that needs oiling more than any other it is the Test team. The one-day side can get away with losing players for breaks – they are that good,” Vaughan added.

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Things we can control, we have to control: Justin Langer laments slow over rate costing Australia WTC Final spot

Australian coach Justin Langer has called the slow over mistake committed by his team as something ‘really slack’ after it came down to a difference of 0.3 percentage points between them and their trans-Tasman neighbours New Zealand to qualify for the inaugural Wolrd Test Championship. In an interview with Australian radio SEN, Langer explained how perplexed and distraught he felt after realising the mistake made by his team during the Melbourne Test. “It wasn't until after the game that we realised our over-rate was down. Now, that's really slack on our behalf,” he said. Langer, 48, further went on to tell how he had said in a very grumpy tone to his players and skipper Tim Paine how those two overs can cost them the World Test Championship. "I remember we were in the Team room after the game, I spoke to Painey and Dene Hills, our analyst, about it. I was a bit grumpy about it and I thought 'imagine if this cost us the World Test Championship'," Langer said. "And I mentioned it to the players afterwards that two overs down could cost us the World Test Championship. And so, we have to get better at that and make sure it doesn't happen in Sydney and Brisbane,” he added. However, the four points cut after the slow over-rate in MCG did eventually come back to bite the Aussies. After cancelling the South Africa tour and India defeating England 3-1 in the series, Australia remained stranded on the third position in the Points Table. Saying that they have learnt the lesson of at least controlling the controllable, Langer said, "It's very disappointing, but the lesson is the things that we can control, we have to control. And we can't relax for a second in Test cricket."