09 July,2022 12:45 PM IST | Birmingham | PTI
Jonny Bairstow reacts as he walks back to the pavilion having lost his wicket for 136 during play on day 5 of the second Test cricket match between England and New Zealand. Pic/AFP
Star England batter Jonny Bairstow has credited his sensational run of form in the past five Test innings, including the two against India, to freedom from Covid-19 protocols and role clarity under new head coach Brendon McCullum.
Bairstow struck 106 and 114 not out to play a major role in England's seven wicket win over India in the rescheduled fifth Test which the hosts won here on Tuesday. Before that, he scored 1, 16, 8, 136, 162, 71 not out in the three-match Test series against New Zealand which England won 3-0.
"It's the freedom we have now. We're not in hotel rooms, bubbles, having to do Covid tests everyday and we can do normal things like go to the shop, go for a beer, see your friends and family," Bairstow told the Tailenders podcast.
"All of those things accumulate together and obviously the excitement of working with Baz (McCullum) and the clarity he gave everyone."
ALSO READ
Former England cricketer weighs in on Joe Root's chances of overtaking Tendulkar
Bank of England warns of 'heightened uncertainty' as it keeps interest rates on hold
UK inflation rises further above Bank of England's target in November
Southee sent off in style as NZ clinch huge 423-run win over England
Father, stepmother sent to prison for life in killing of 10-year-old girl in England
England's four successive Test victories recently have come playing aggressive cricket under New Zealander McCullum.
Bairstow missed the beginning of the county season this summer as he was playing in the Indian Premier League. But McCullum told him that would not affect his place in the Test team.
Also Read: Virat Kohli can't play for long by riding on his name: Karsan Ghavri
"Before we played New Zealand, there was chat about going to the IPL and not playing county cricket but Baz phoned me, said I was batting five in the Tests, to get my head around it and crack on," Bairstow said.
"Baz also spoke to me a bit about imposing myself on the game - nothing technical. That can be tricky in red-ball cricket because you don't want to look like you're slogging.
"I had two nets before the first game so finding the balance was interesting. I played a shot-a-ball at Lord's (scoring one and 16) which didn't go down too well and then found the balance better at Trent Bridge (scoring 136)."
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever