Rob Key to Probe England Players' Noosa Conduct During Ashes, Calls Excessive Drinking "Unacceptable"

England's managing director of cricket, Rob Key, has announced he will examine the behaviour of players during their four-night mid-Ashes break in Noosa, Queensland. This follows media reports comparing the trip to a stag do after England's defeat in Adelaide. Key emphasized that while a casual drink is acceptable, excessive alcohol consumption is "completely unacceptable" for the national team.

Key Points: England MD Rob Key to Review Ashes Break Behaviour in Noosa, Warns on Drinking Culture

  • England managing director to review team's mid-series break conduct
  • Reports emerge comparing Noosa trip to a stag do after Adelaide Test loss
  • Key states excessive drinking is unacceptable for an international side
  • Coach Brendon McCullum had planned the trip as a refreshment exercise
  • Informal warnings were issued to Brook and Bethell for prior incident
  • Investigation aims to determine if disciplinary action is required
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Rob Key to review England players' behaviour during mid-Ashes break

England managing director Rob Key says he will investigate reports of players' conduct during the mid-Ashes break in Noosa, stating excessive alcohol consumption is "completely unacceptable."

"If there's things where people are saying that our players went out and drank excessively then of course we'll be looking into that. - Rob Key / ESPNcricinfo"

New Delhi, December 23

Rob Key has said that he will look into England players' behaviour during their mid-Ashes break in Noosa and made it clear that excessive drinking is completely unacceptable for an international cricket side, as per ESPNcricinfo.

England headed to Noosa, a well-known coastal resort in Queensland, following their eight-wicket loss in the second Test at the Gabba. The team stayed there for four nights, insisting it was a mid-series break and not a holiday. Head coach Brendon McCullum, who planned the trip, had earlier described it as a positive move that would help the players feel refreshed ahead of the third Test.

Key, England's managing director, did not accompany the team to Noosa and initially believed that the players had conducted themselves properly. However, after England went on to lose the Adelaide Test by 82 runs, reports emerged comparing the trip to a stag do. Speaking at the MCG on Tuesday, Key said he would examine what actually took place during the break and decide if any action was needed.

"If there's things where people are saying that our players went out and drank excessively then of course we'll be looking into that," Key said, as quoted from ESPNcricinfo.

"Drinking excessive amounts of alcohol for an international cricket team is not something that I'd expect to see at any stage, and it would be a fault not to look into what happened there. But from everything that I've heard so far, they were very well behaved," he noted.

"I've read what's been written in the last day or so, and if it goes into where they're drinking lots and it's a stag do, all that type of stuff, that's completely unacceptable. I'm not a drinker. I think a drinking culture doesn't help anyone in any stretch whatsoever," he added.

"I have no issue with the Noosa trip if it was to get away and just throw your phone away, down tools, go on the beach... Everything that I've heard so far is that they sat down, had lunch, had dinner, didn't go out late, had the odd drink. I don't mind that. If it goes past that, then that's an issue as far as I'm concerned... There's lots of people there that might disagree with that, but that's what we'll find out," he said.

He also disclosed that Jacob Bethell and Harry Brook had been cautioned by team management before the Ashes series. The warning followed an incident in which the duo were filmed drinking at a bar on the eve of England's third ODI in New Zealand.

"I don't mind players having a glass of wine over dinner. Anything more than that I think is ridiculous, really," Key said, as quoted from ESPNcricinfo.

"There wasn't any formal action... I didn't feel like that was worthy of formal warnings, but it was probably worthy of informal ones," he noted.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
A break is fine, but professionalism is key. If they were losing and then went on a 'stag do', it shows poor attitude. Rob Key is right to look into it. Our players also take breaks but with much more responsibility.
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Aman W
Honestly, this 'Bazball' culture seems to be more about attitude than actual skill sometimes. A bit of relaxation is okay, but excessive drinking during a series? That's just not done. Hope they learn from this.
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Sarah B
It's interesting to see different team cultures. The Indian team management is very strict about these things. Maybe England needs that kind of structure too. A glass of wine is fine, but a 'stag do' vibe is unacceptable for professionals.
K
Karthik V
As a cricket fan, this is disappointing. The Ashes is the biggest rivalry! You can't afford to lose focus. Our players would never do this before a Border-Gavaskar Trophy match. Priorities seem wrong.
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Nisha Z
I think we should be careful before judging. The coach planned it as a refreshment break. If they just had dinner and an odd drink, it's fine. The problem is if the reports of excess are true. Let the review happen.
M
Michael C

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