McCullum's vanishing act: England's coach making himself vital by staying away
England's red-ball coach survived an internal Ashes review and missed nearly half the county season. The question now is whether his high-visibility brand can sustain itself without a more consistent presence in the domestic game that feeds the Test side.

Brendon McCullum played a Seinfeld episode to his England players before the last Ashes series. The reference landed — a George Costanza riff about sitting in a chair pretending to be busy while accomplishing nothing. It was a self-aware joke. It turns out it was also a strategy.
England's red-ball head coach missed 43 percent of the county championship season, according to figures circulating within the domestic game and confirmed by multiple reports from cricket correspondents covering the circuit. He has been present enough to maintain the high-visibility, high-charisma presence that made him ECB's preferred hire in 2023. He has been absent enough that several county head coaches have privately noted the gap — not as a personal grievance, but as a structural problem. They run programmes. He runs appearances.
The ECB's internal review into the 2025-26 Ashes defeat — England lost the series 3-1 on Australian soil — cleared McCullum of direct culpability. The review's findings, first reported by cricket correspondents covering the tour, attributed the loss to batting attrition and injury management rather than coaching philosophy. McCullum kept his job. That alone tells you something about the culture of the current setup. When a coach's standing survives a 3-1 away defeat, the explanation is rarely that the programme delivered exactly what was asked of it.
The cost of the cameo culture
County cricket is where England Test batsmen are forged. The championship remains the dominant red-ball domestic competition in the country, and the head coach of the national side has historically maintained a working relationship with county head coaches — attending some fixtures, engaging with emerging talent, building the personal knowledge base that informs selection and development decisions. McCullum's predecessor, Chris Silverwood, was criticised for many things, but not for showing up.
The sources describing McCullum's county-season attendance — roughly 57 percent of available fixtures — paint a picture of a coach who has optimised for media moments and Test-match weeks, leaving the grinding work of domestic oversight to others. One county head coach, speaking on condition of anonymity to correspondents covering the domestic circuit, described the arrangement as "fine when things are going well and you need a personality in the room. Less fine when a 23-year-old fast bowler needs five minutes of actual coaching."
That is not a trivial concern. England have consistently struggled to develop homegrown pace bowlers capable of sustaining Test-level workloads. The pipeline depends partly on county head coaches identifying talent early and partly on the national side investing in that identification process. A head coach who attends fewer than six in ten county fixtures is, by definition, ceding that investment.
The brand versus the job
McCullum arrived in 2023 with a reputation built on transformation. At New Zealand, he had overseen a cultural reset that produced attractive cricket and genuine optimism. At England, he inherited a side in relative disarray after the sacking of Silverwood and appointed his former New Zealand colleague Gary Steadt as a spin consultancy role — a decision that drew scrutiny at the time and has since generated quiet friction within the support-staff structure, according to reports from the England cricket press corps covering the setup.
The transformation brand translated well to the Test arena when results cooperated. England's 2023 home series win over Pakistan, the 2024 victory in India, the dramatic Wellington Test in early 2026 — these gave McCullum the credibility buffer that sustained him through the Australia tour. But credibility buffers erode. The Ashes review did not clear McCullum so much as delay a reckoning.
There is a credible counter-reading. McCullum's job, as defined by ECB, may simply not include heavy county presence. If the role is primarily about Test-match preparation, squad culture, and senior leadership in high-pressure series, then the cameo pattern may be intentional rather than negligent. England have had coaches who were deeply embedded in the county system — Andy Flower, for instance — and that model produced excellent results, but it also produced a hierarchical rigidity that McCullum was explicitly hired to break.
That counter-reading has merit. But it runs into the structural problem: McCullum's mandate includes developing a pipeline for a Test side that is not rotating players successfully. If he is not doing the county work, he needs someone else to be doing it on his behalf, and the evidence that such a structure exists in coherent form is thin.
What comes next
The ECB hierarchy faces a decision that is partly about McCullum and partly about how they want their coaching model to function. The current arrangement — star-coach presence during Test windows, sparse engagement the rest of the time — works when the team is winning. It is considerably harder to defend after a 3-1 away defeat that exposed persistent batting vulnerabilities against high-quality seam attacks.
Several county head coaches are due to meet ECB performance director Mo Bobat in the coming weeks as part of a scheduled consultation process. The McCullum question will not be the agenda's only item, but sources tracking the meeting suggest it will surface. The outcome of those conversations will likely determine whether the cameo model receives a mandate extension or a quiet renegotiation.
England's next red-ball assignment is a three-match series at home beginning in late May. McCullum will almost certainly be in position for that series. Whether he attends the county fixtures between now and then is the more relevant question — and right now, the evidence suggests he will not.
McCullum was contacted for comment. ECB declined to provide a specific figure for his county-season attendance.