Brendon McCullum is reluctant to wrap Mark Wood and Jofra Archer in cotton wool after assembling an arsenal of quicks for England that could “blow teams away”.
England’s need for speed which they view as critical to regaining the Ashes in Australia this winter places added importance on the shoulders of Wood and Archer, both of whom have had stop-start careers.
Wood has been sidelined since August due to a stress fracture in his right elbow and Archer is so far on a diet of white-ball only cricket on his latest comeback from injuries to his bowling arm and back.
The pair are in India ahead of McCullum starting his reign as England head coach in all formats but there is supplementary firepower from Brydon Carse, Jamie Overton, Saqib Mahmood and Gus Atkinson.
“While the guys are fit and they’re firing and they’re enjoying playing, you don’t want to hold them back,” McCullum said.
“I wouldn’t imagine that we’d be doing too much of that cotton-wool treatment.
“(You have to) plan as if you live for ever but live as if you die tomorrow, you’ve got to have ideas in your head and that’s why we’ve been open about us wanting to build a battery of fast bowlers.
“Pace just adds that little bit of uncomfortableness for the opposition and allows a bit more margin for error too. It also gives the chance to potentially blow teams away and get on top.”
The trip, which includes three ODIs, acts as a warm-up for the Champions Trophy starting next month and McCullum, who has local knowledge of the conditions having played for and coached Kolkata Knight Riders in the Indian Premier League, believes making regular inroads into the home side’s batting will be key.
“Over here, you do need to be taking wickets,” McCullum said.
“Because ground size and Indian pitches are pretty good, so if you’re not chipping away in the wicket column, then scores can get pretty big. We’ll be looking to try and take wickets, and having that extra little bit of pace helps.
“I know this is going to be a tough tour but I’m super excited. I’m desperate for us to play a really watchable brand of cricket, with the talent we have there’s no reason we can’t.”
Buttler seemed to have rediscovered his mojo after returning from a long injury lay-off in the Caribbean before Christmas, having cut a doleful figure in their twin World Cup disappointments, and McCullum suggested the 34-year-old might still have his best days in front of him.
“Sometimes when you get that opportunity to lead in the latter part of your career, there’s times where you can be a little bit desperate for success,” said McCullum, who confirmed Harry Brook as England’s white-ball vice-captain.
“That can create frustration and it doesn’t become quite as enjoyable. If you can let yourself go a little bit with nothing to prove, other than trying to get the best out of those around you, sometimes it can free your game up even more and you can end up performing really strongly.
“Jos is excited about the next little while and I’m sure you’ll see him smile when we’re out on the field. His best years could definitely be ahead of him.”