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Brook parks Ashes chat to train focus on New Zealand

White-ball captain wary of distractions as he embarks on first tour in charge

Cameron Ponsonby
17-Oct-2025 • 10 hrs ago
Harry Brook and Mitchell Santner have a keen eye on the series trophy, Christchurch, October 15, 2025

Harry Brook and Mitchell Santner have a keen eye on the series trophy  •  AFP/Getty Images

It is infuriating talking to an England player at the moment. The biggest series in years is on the horizon. It's all we've been speaking about for months. And rather than indulge in playground gossip like the rest of us, they're rising above it.
"We're in New Zealand," says Harry Brook, speaking from New Zealand. So far, so good. "I'm the white-ball captain." Also correct. "We've got a game tomorrow night." Three from three. "And that's all I'm thinking about." Wrong. Tell us that Josh Hazlewood is going to get sent to the moon.
This is a refined Harry Brook. Wiser than the man who was once burnt after saying he was glad he could "shut up" Indian fans in 2023, then twice burnt by England fans in 2024 after saying "who cares" if someone gets caught on the boundary. Now, in 2025, he is a man who leads his country on and off the pitch. When England were given a traditional cultural welcome on Friday at the Hagley Oval, it was Brook, in his role as captain, whose responsibility it was to stand and say a few words of thanks to the local Maori leaders at the end of the ceremony. A simple, but important task that earned him a tap on the thigh from head coach Brendon McCullum.
"Like I said. We're in New Zealand now," Brook reiterates.
Through nothing other than coincidence, Brook's development as a cricketer has been inextricably linked to the country. His Test captain, Ben Stokes, has his roots in New Zealand. The only Test head coach he's ever known, McCullum, is one of the most famous New Zealanders of all time. His centuries in Wellington, Christchurch and Wellington again include arguably his finest knock in an England shirt. And his first tour as an England captain is to the country as well. Most recently, Gilbert Enoka, the famous mental skills coach who worked extensively with the All Blacks, has become a figure Brook turns to for advice.
"He's awesome," Brook said of Enoka's presence with the England team. "We've actually just done a session with him now for an hour or so. To have him in the ranks, just to be able to pull him for a chat for five or 10 minutes is awesome."
Unprompted, Brook, who was recently named as vice-captain of the Test side, spoke about his need to adapt both as a captain and a batter. A question about Jacob Bethell's ability against spin segued into an answer about Brook's recognition about the need to be flexible with a batting line-up.
"I haven't liked doing that in the past," Brook says of switching left-and-right-handers in the order depending on what the opposition is throwing up. In his eyes, that amounts to a bending of the knee to an opponent who should be dictated to, not delegated around.
"But whatever's best for the team at that stage is vital. And like I said before, having them little chats with Gilbert with everybody heading in the same direction, knowing that things might change here and there is vital for the side."
Similarly with his batting, his quickly trademarked but almost impossible to describe roly-poly Dilscoop ramp, that he unfurled in the Hundred, sounds set for a spell on the sidelines. As a shot it is a moment of pure entertainment. But rather than being the sign of a man with unlimited confidence and limitless form, Brook saw it as a sign he was straying too far into the woods.
"It's fun when the crowd's cheering and whatnot," Brook told talkSPORT. "But it doesn't necessarily work every time.
"I've actually been quite disappointed with the way I've played in white-ball cricket. I feel like I've been premeditating a lot. And that's one goal for me this series, just to try and play on instinct as much as possible."
Brook's aim to move away from premeditation stems from a desire, to use a football term, to play the way he's facing. The fact he is able to play 360 degrees, he feels, is pulling him in too many directions. Literally.
"Because I'm hitting it in different areas," Brook explained of why he wanted to scale back. "Obviously it all depends on the situation of the game and the surface, but when I'm at my best I'm hitting it straight."
Brook got engaged recently. It can be the only explanation for such clarity of thought. A man can only plan so much. And a wedding outranks deciding when to scoop Jacob Duffy.
When Brook entered the international set-up in 2022, Stokes made a joke at his expense, calling him "a bit dumb". Joe Root joined the party a couple of years later when referring (endearingly, it must be said) to Brook as an "idiot".
But the fact of the matter is that Brook is very likely to walk out at some stage across the Ashes series with the England blazer on and as captain of his country. Stokes has missed a match through injury in each of his last four Test series. And the Brook that does so, thanks to those around him, will be very different to the one who debuted just over three years ago.
"I want Stokesy to play all five games," Brook said, knocking back any suggestion he's thought at all about the prospect of walking out on Boxing Day to call heads in front of 95,000 people. "But now we're in New Zealand. I'm the white-ball captain, and that's my main focus. That's all I'm thinking about at this moment in time. We've got a game tomorrow night. And like I've said so many times, [I want to] just stay in the moment as much as possible."
Brook is only interested in speaking about New Zealand. And really, given his history here, why would he want to talk about anything else?

Cameron Ponsonby is a freelance cricket writer in London. @cameronponsonby