Sports
Would love to coach England one day: Flintoff
London, Sep 7
Former England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff has expressed his desire to become the head coach of the national side "one day".
Trevor Bayliss will step down as England coach at the end of this summer's Ashes series and his successor has not yet been appointed.
"Coaching is definitely an ambition," BBC Sport quoted Flintoff as saying.
"There are probably two or three coaching jobs I'd like - England, Lancashire or Lancashire Academy.
"I'd love to be England coach one day, just not quite yet," he added.
He revealed that he applied for the national team coaching job when it became available in 2014 but was not taken seriously and the role went to Peter Moores.
"A few years ago I applied for the England coaching job - we were getting beat, I was in the office and thought, 'I'm going to apply'," Flintoff said.
"I wrote an email for the interview, a month passed and I'd heard nothing. I chased it up, then I got a phone call saying they thought it was somebody taking the mick.
The 41-year-old, who retired from international cricket in 2009, played 79 Tests, 141 ODIs and seven T20s for England and was part of Ashes winning sides in 2005 and 2009.
Trevor Bayliss will step down as England coach at the end of this summer's Ashes series and his successor has not yet been appointed.
"Coaching is definitely an ambition," BBC Sport quoted Flintoff as saying.
"There are probably two or three coaching jobs I'd like - England, Lancashire or Lancashire Academy.
"I'd love to be England coach one day, just not quite yet," he added.
He revealed that he applied for the national team coaching job when it became available in 2014 but was not taken seriously and the role went to Peter Moores.
"A few years ago I applied for the England coaching job - we were getting beat, I was in the office and thought, 'I'm going to apply'," Flintoff said.
"I wrote an email for the interview, a month passed and I'd heard nothing. I chased it up, then I got a phone call saying they thought it was somebody taking the mick.
The 41-year-old, who retired from international cricket in 2009, played 79 Tests, 141 ODIs and seven T20s for England and was part of Ashes winning sides in 2005 and 2009.
5 hours ago
AAPICON 2026: A Landmark Celebration of Leadership, Healing, Innovation & Indo‑American Collaboration
5 hours ago
Indian American leaders celebrate US at 250
5 hours ago
US Congressional hearing examines CIA's use of universities, hospitals, prisons
5 hours ago
Trump resumes America 250 celebration after weather disruption
5 hours ago
'America is winning': Trump hails military strength, economic gains on 250 years of US independence
5 hours ago
Trump vows America will 'never' embrace communism
5 hours ago
Putin, Trump hold phone call on Ukraine, bilateral ties on US Independence Day
5 hours ago
Former US presidents urge Americans to defend democracy
5 hours ago
Vance praises sailors after storm damage
5 hours ago
JD Vance hails American spirit at US Navy's 250th anniversary celebration
5 hours ago
Vance rejects 'zero-sum' view of US
5 hours ago
Charges should never have been brought: DOJ defends dismissal of Adani case
5 hours ago
Massive fire guts exhibition goods warehouse in Delhi’s Chandan Hola, no casualties reported
