'Half of team doesn't drink' - Brendon McCullum responds to Harry Brook's Noosa trip revelation
Brendon McCullum came to the aid of England players following the Harry Brook nightclub controversy and the contentious Noosa trip during the Ashes 2025-26 series.
England head coach Brendon McCullum came to the aid of his players following the Harry Brook nightclub controversy and the contentious Noosa trip during the Ashes 2025-26 series. The Three Lions lost the series 1-4 in Australia, a result which prolonged their wait to reclaim the coveted urn.
Apart from the insipid performance, the touring team's off-the-field activities caught much of the attention in the end. After England’s defeat in the third Test in Adelaide, reports suggested that the squad’s four-day break in Noosa had become a stage where some of the players lost control of themselves after going beyond just socialising.
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) was forced into damage control after a video surfaced of opener Ben Duckett appearing heavily intoxicated, struggling to speak clearly while interacting with a supporter.
In the aftermath of the defeat in the fifth Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground, new controversy appeared when it was revealed that Harry Brook had been involved in an altercation with a nightclub bouncer during England’s tour of New Zealand, where the team faced a 3–0 defeat. The incident reportedly put Brook’s white-ball captaincy in jeopardy.
Fans and experts were left fuming after these reports, with some accusing the ECB for ignoring the serious issue altogether. After returning home to New Zealand, McCullum said that half the players in his team don't drink.
"Half our guys don’t have a drink, to be honest. They’ll have a couple of beers every now and again. I think people do that in most walks of life," McCullum was quoted as saying by India Today.
I'm not against evolution and not against progress: McCullum
While McCullum knows that his coaching tenure at England might come to an end after the Ashes drubbing, he asserted that he wants to persist with his beliefs in the end.
"I've a firm conviction in a lot of my methods. I'm not against evolution and not against progress. I encourage that across all sports, not just cricket, and in all aspects of life as well. So I'm not against that," McCullum said.
England could bring back Flower as coach: Pietersen
England's next assignment is a white-ball tour of Sri Lanka. The European nation faces the Lankan Lions in a three-match series before playing three T20Is. These matches will be held from January 22 to February 3.
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