
CricketnMore
newspoint|18-05-2026
A New Zealand cricketer is the head coach of the England cricket team.
Now an Australian cricketer has been appointed England selector. He is the first non-Englishman in the role and one of the tasks he is going to take is to select the England team for the next Ashes.
He is 46-year-old, Marcus North, who played 21 Tests for Australia and was in the race for the selectors vacancy. He got the nod over former England cricketers Steven Finn and Darren Gough.
Marcus North is not new to English cricket. He played for Gateshead Fell Cricket Club in 2000 and lived in the North East (where he met his English wife).
He played for six county cricket clubs, including Durham (others: Lancashire, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Hampshire and Glamorgan) during his playing career and has been Durhams director of cricket since October 2018. This made his candidature very strong, and he was one of the shortlisted candidates interviewed. Four years ago, he was interviewed for the role of ECBs managing director of mens cricket but was not selected. The job went to Rob Key, with whom he will now work.Once his playing career ended, North became director of cricket at South Northumberland Cricket Club in the Northeast and was then appointed director of cricket at Durham, overseeing both the mens and womens teams.
Incidentally, Englands Test captain Ben Stokes plays for Durham and North is credited with the development of several England players, while working closely with Stokes.The vacancy in the selection panel was created when Luke Wright left at the end of the T20 World Cup in February, taking the moral responsibility for Englands poor show. The Durham director of cricket impressed the interview panel with his vision for the betterment of English cricket.
Luke Wright was an England selector, whereas Marcus North would occupy a more senior position in the selection panel.He will not serve the six-month notice period with Durham and has been asked to join the other selectors to pick up the squad for the first Test against New Zealand starting from June 4.
The English national selector panel at present includes the England director of cricket Rob Key, the head coach Brendon McCullum, the captain (either Ben Stokes or Harry Brook) and the ECBs heads of elite performance and talent identification.
North has also worked with the England white-ball captain Harry Brook.
At the start of the Hundred, both Yorkshire and Durham were jointly running the Leeds-based franchise and North was taken as director of cricket at Northern Superchargers (now known as Sunrisers Leeds, after investment from SRH) and Brook was playing for them. Former England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff was then taken as the Superchargers head coach. Now Flintoff is the head coach of the England Lions and will remain associated with North to oversee the progress of players to the senior level.The record reveals that Marcus North is not the first Australian player to work as an England selector, but he is the first Australian appointed to select the national team.
In fact, he is the first man not from these shores to be charged with selecting the national team. Former Australian wicketkeeper Rod Marsh served as an England selector from 2003-2005, because of his role as director of the National Cricket Academy.During this entire process, Steven Finn (who played with Brendon McCullum at Middlesex) was a prime candidate, but Norths background in administration and association with county cricket, tilted the balance in his favour. Finn is in broadcasting (working for the BBC). North knows the county game inside out. He is the most English of Australians, because of his England experience.
Now the most important task ahead for North is proper planning for the next Ashes tour in 2029-30, which may have helped him to overtake the other candidates.
Also Read: Live Cricket ScoreMarcus North played 21 Tests for Australia, between 2009 and 2010, including two Ashes series. He scored five centuries, including a memorable Ashes ton at Headingley (back-to-back returns of 96 and 110 in Birmingham and Leeds) and one in the drawn first Test in Cardiff (unbeaten 125). He averaged 35.48 from his 21 Tests.




