
Alastair Cook feels answer is clear in Jacob Bethell vs Ollie Pope debate
Alastair Cook is in no doubt who should be batting at three for England against India this week, confident that Ollie Pope deserves the place over Jacob Bethell.
England begin their Test series against India at Headingley on Friday, with the weather in Leeds forecast to be brilliant for the five scheduled days.
Although England are not at full strength, due to Jofra Archer, Mark Wood and Gus Atkinson all struggling for fitness, the line-up is fairly straight forward to predict, other than at number three.
The 21-year-old Bethell made a fantastic start to his Test career in New Zealand over the winter, scoring 260 runs over three matches and averaging 52.
However, he did not play in the one-off Test against Zimbabwe in May, with Pope returning to number three and scoring 171 in a dominant England victory.
Bethell was absent from that game as he was playing in the IPL, a decision from England that was criticised at the time by Michael Atherton and now Cook lays some blame at the player's feet, suggesting he should be prioritising Test cricket.
'He didn't play in the Zimbabwe Test match for whatever reason and that kind of irks me a little bit for a guy who loves Test cricket,' Cook told Metro, speaking at the launch of The Overlap and Betfair's Stick to Cricket.
'So then Ollie Pope plays. Ollie Pope gets 100, so he plays. That's how I would go about selection.'
One of England's all-time greats is not down on Bethell's talent, but feels he is yet to have seen enough of him to be convinced he deserves a key position in the Test side.
'I don't think you can be fully convinced about anyone. Apart from Joe Root or Brian Lara, or somebody like that,' he said.
'We're looking at a 21-year-old. He's had a really good start to his International career and his franchise career, but without a shadow of a doubt there's questions about the guy because he's 21 years old.
'The one thing I have to take at face value is a lot of people who you respect the opinions of, including Andrew Flintoff, Brendon McCullum, Ben Stokes, Rob Key, Joe Root, say this guy's the real deal.
'I'm not that close to Jacob Bethell, I haven't seen enough of him in certain situations, so you're taking their opinion on that.'
He added on Stick to Cricket: 'When I left New Zealand I thought they'll go with Jacob Bethell but if he isn't leaving the IPL to come and play a Test match, for whatever reason that it, it's not a punishment, but that's the way the cards have fallen whether it's Bethell's fault or not.
'If he's that desperate to play I would have said he would have come out and played, then he'd have guaranteed his England selection. I don't care what's going on behind the scenes on that.'
Cook may have been disappointed by Bethell's decision to play at the IPL, but he has been impressed by his mentality when on the field.
'I can only admire the way Bethell's taken to international cricket,' he said. 'He's certainly one of those players where the occasion doesn't over-rule him, he looks mentally good.
'He's done well to cope with everything, because when he got selected, I thought that's a hell of a task for him.
'But he's played a handful of games. Let's judge him in two years, three years and if he flies, absolutely fantastic. But I think we're all allowed to say: 'It's very early days, he's played three Test matches, got no professional 100s. Let's just let him develop'.'
England's manager director Rob Key is relaxed on the call at number three, saying that is a good selection headache to have.
'I don't see it as a problem, really. You win either way, really,' Key told the Telegraph's cricket podcast.
'You've got two brilliant players that can do that role. Ollie Pope's been fantastic in that tough spot; he played brilliantly in New Zealand, alright, he was in a different role, but we've got two brilliant options in those spots.
'A tough decision is when you've got no options, and you've got to just then try and find something from nowhere. That's when I'm sort of scratching my head. This one is: 'Which really good player are we going to pick?' It's a good position to be in.'
MORE: Ben Duckett has a bit of Brian Lara about him and won't back down against Jasprit Bumrah in India Tests
MORE: Ben Stokes could unleash Bazball on steroids when Zimbabwe make their overdue Test-match return to England

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Telegraph
11 hours ago
- Telegraph
Sticking with Ollie Pope could hurt England's Ashes chances
Picking Ollie Pope over Jacob Bethell to bat at No 3 against India is the fair call but that does not make it the right one. There is a difference between the two and it threatens to haunt England as they stand on the cusp of a run of 10 Test matches that Rob Key, the director of cricket, admitted this week would be used to 'define this era'. Ollie Pope scored 171 in his last innings when Bethell missed the Zimbabwe Test to play in the Indian Premier League, doing everything he could to keep his place when it looked as though a new kid had come along and taken to No 3 like a natural. Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum have honoured that performance against a poor Zimbabwe attack and gone with Pope against India, despite the baggage he brings. Pope averages 24 against India, and just 15 when faced with Australia. When the pressure of a big series takes hold, Pope has floundered. In 98 Test innings, Pope has scored eight hundreds, one every 12.25 innings, which is better than Graeme Hick (one in every 14) but slightly worse than Paul Collingwood (one in 11). No disrespect to Collingwood, a fine scrapper for England, but expectations of Pope were higher when he started out. Pope's numbers are inflated by the Zimbabwe 171 and 205 against Ireland. Those runs still needed to be scored, but if you subtract the performances against the two minnows his average drops to 32. Suddenly, six hundreds in 96 innings looks pretty thin and in 36 of those, he has been dismissed facing 20 balls or fewer, not exactly the rock a team want at No 3 against the new ball. Bethell has no such history because he has barely played any cricket and to anoint him as a No 3 without a professional hundred to his name is a gamble, too, but his composure in his three Tests so far marked him out. He averaged 52 in New Zealand and, at the end of that tour, the futures of both Bethell and Pope appeared settled. Bethell would build experience this summer against India, a high-pressure series that is as close to playing Australia as is possible to experience. Pope, meanwhile, would become the reserve keeper-batsman, a cover lower down the order where he looked so much more comfortable in New Zealand, making two important fifties batting at No 6. Instead, based on a performance against Zimbabwe rather than a high-quality New Zealand side, Pope is back at No 3 and how he responds this time will be career-defining. He knows there is a rival ready to take his place, and a player who has struggled to shut out the external pressures of the job will have to learn a laser-like focus against a Jasprit Bumrah-led attack. It will be hard. Bumrah has dismissed Pope five times, most gallingly bringing him back down to earth at his highest peak. In the innings after his 196 in Hyderabad, Pope reached 23 in Visakhapatnam only for Bumrah to detonate his stumps with a fine yorker. Pope scored 95 in his next seven innings. Akash Chopra " If Bumrah's Ball to Ollie Pope was sent down during the ashes, it could have been a contender for the ball of the century " — Sujeet Suman (@sujeetsuman1991) March 12, 2024 There will be no going back if he fails this time. With James Rew and Jordan Cox candidates to be Jamie Smith's back-up in Australia, there are no lives left for Pope. Bethell should play in the County Championship for Warwickshire against Somerset on Sunday, his first game in red-ball cricket since the Hamilton Test in December. Where his county bats him will be of immediate interest. Surely they will not keep him down at No 7, like they did before his England call-up. Bethell cannot be blamed for staying at the IPL. It is up to those higher up to make the decision about where a 21-year-old plays his cricket, and England should have recalled him for the Zimbabwe Test, not just to avoid the messiness with Pope, but to give Bethell the experience he badly needs. But instead England and the England and Wales Cricket Board lacked the appetite to upset India relations and allowed one of their young talents to be an IPL bench-warmer (he was not even in the first-choice RCB XI) instead of playing Test cricket. Now they are dealing with the knock-on effect. It runs the risk of Pope failing, Bethell taking his place but in the meantime missing matches and time that would be so useful before the Ashes tour, not just to develop his batting but also his left-arm spin. There is a strong team spirit in this group and this is not a call that threatens to break any bonds, like it could have done in more fragile environments of the past. Pope is popular and being vice-captain carries some cache. He stepped in for Stokes last year and led the team to two series victories. Bethell batted alongside Pope in the nets yesterday at Headingley and two took part in catching practice. There were no clues from their body language about who had been given the nod. It is a decision that Pope will have to justify pretty quickly.


Metro
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- Metro
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Glasgow Times
14 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Ollie Pope retains England place at number three for first Test against India
The pair were going head to head for the number three spot at Headingley on Friday, Bethell having made a striking impression while deputising during the New Zealand tour in December before Pope reasserted himself with a knock of 171 against Zimbabwe last month. Bethell missed that match, opting instead to play for Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the Indian Premier League, but he offered plenty of reminders about his talent during the recent white-ball series against the West Indies. The 21-year-old will now need to wait for form or fitness to open up a vacancy in the side, while Pope will know there is a viable rival for his shirt waiting in the wings should he struggle for runs in Leeds. Pope has been a fixture in the side under the leadership of head coach Brendon McCullum and captain Ben Stokes, taking over from the latter for four Tests last year when he tore a hamstring, but there have been concerns over a lack of runs against India and Australia – England's next opponents over an era-defining 10 Tests. Pope averages 35.49 over his 56-Test career, but that drops to 24.60 against India and even more alarmingly to 15.70 in five Ashes appearances, but he now has the chance to show he has the mettle. England's Ollie Pope during a nets session at Headingley (Danny Lawson/PA) Stokes suggested there is an 'agenda' against Pope after quotes he gave about Bethell's return to the squad were interpreted as a suggestion that he would come straight back into the XI. The Warwickshire man's huge reserves of talent are balanced against the fact that he has yet to score a century in professional cricket and he will now need to add patience to the long list of qualities England have identified in him. There are two changes to the team that beat Zimbabwe by an innings in three days at Trent Bridge, the experienced Chris Woakes returning in place of the injured Gus Atkinson to lead the attack and Brydon Carse winning his first home cap at Sam Cook's expense. India vice-captain Rishabh Pant said it felt 'so good' to know India would not be facing the new-ball threat of either James Anderson or Stuart Broad for the first time since 2007, but Carse is eager to show he can assume the mantle of strike bowler. 'There's no hiding away from the fact that, over a number of years, England have had Broad and Anderson as the main two bowlers, so it is slightly more inexperienced,' he said. 'I think it's a good chance for a couple of younger players, with slightly less experience, to stamp down some authority throughout the series. 'There has been a little bit of conversation around the new ball but I'm sure, over the next 24 hours, I'll have more clarity over that. It's an opportunity I'd relish to put my hand up and take that chance. 'It's also good having someone like a Chris Woakes who has played a lot of Test cricket in different conditions, against different teams. He's someone that brings a level of confidence and calmness to a bowling group.'