Cricket Addictor
For fastest livescore in India
cricketaddictor.com

Harry Brook claims he was "Perfectly Fine" with being sacked as England captain after nightclub fight

Published - 21 Jan 2026, 03:20 PM | Updated - 21 Jan 2026, 11:34 PM

England skipper Harry Brook
England announce playing XI for 1st ODI (Image credit: X)

England white-ball skipper Harry Brook has been fortunate to be retained as the white-ball captain for the national side following an altercation with a bouncer in New Zealand. Brook has apologized to his teammates and the management and has pledged to regain their trust.

The England team has struggled with several blows in recent times. The greats of the game from the nation have been seen in a critical condition, reflecting acute indiscipline. Recently, on their tour to New Zealand and then the Ashes, the England players were piling up with drinking accusations.

Players like Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, and English white-ball captain and red-ball vice-captain Harry Brook were spotted drinking unstoppably alongside their teammates. A review was also done on the Noosa vacation of the team, but ECB director Rob Key cleared them of any case that needed explanation.

SHORTS

View More

Your daily dose of cricket!

Loading...
prev
next

Harry Brook apologizes to England teammates and the ECB for his drunken act in NZ

Though the ECB has not punished its players very harshly for irregular activities despite them having severely affected the match results as well, the reputation of the English cricketers has surely been diminished in the public eye.

Harry Brook indulged in an altercation with a bouncer in a nightclub in New Zealand ahead of the final game in the ODI series and was fined £ 30,000 along with a final warning for his off-field actions. He also brought himself very close to being sacked from the captaincy of the England side.

“Obviously, I made a terrible mistake,” Harry Brook said. “Not only as a player, but as a captain. It’s very unprofessional and I should be leading from the front.

“I’ve learnt from my mistakes, I’ve reflected a lot on what’s happened, and I know it wasn’t the right thing to do. I want to say sorry to my teammates, to all the fans that travel far and wide to watch, spend a lot of money on coming out to watch us play cricket and supporting us, and to the ECB for putting them in a tricky situation, and it’ll never happen again. I’m extremely sorry,” said Harry Brook.

The England captain had said that he needed to regain the trust of his players and has hence started by apologising to them.

“I think I’ve got a little bit of work to do to try and regain the trust of the players. I said sorry to them yesterday. I felt like I needed to say sorry for my actions. It’s not acceptable as a player, but as a captain, it’s really not acceptable to do what I did in New Zealand. I’ll be the first person to say that. I hold my hands up,” Brook added.

Harry Brook felt lucky for not being sacked as England's white-ball captain

Harry Brook had himself admitted the incident and reported it to the management midway through the game the next day. Brook, who as a youngster has been cited as one of England's greatest players for the future, had the possibility of the role being snatched from him.

When asked whether he feels lucky to have retained the captaincy for England in the two white-ball formats, he replied, "Probably, yeah."

“If I had been sacked, I’d have held my hands up and said: ‘Look, I’ve made a mistake’ and I’d have been perfectly fine with it, as long as I was still playing cricket for England. “I’m glad that I told them. Playing cricket for England was a childhood dream, so I’m glad that I told them and we’ve dealt with it," he explained.

“No, there’s no drinking culture at all,” Harry Brook safeguards England's honour

After the Noosa incident and the intoxicated English players in Australia, speculation was on the rise that England have a drinking culture within their cricket team.

“No, there’s no drinking culture at all,” Brook insisted. “As I said, everybody has the ability to say no. If you want a drink, if you don’t want a drink, you’re allowed to make that decision yourself," Brook claimed.

He further continued saying that it was not just drinking in Australia. No player was just drinking all day, and every day, they went out, played golf, went to cafes, had coffees, and alongside had a few drinks as well. He also defended his actions, claiming that this is "what human beings do.”

ALSO READ: BCCI ordered to grant Virat Kohli special privilege, no domestic cricket mandate for India legend

CA News
CA News

This author is a member of Cricketaddictor who writes news and analysis related to cricket.

logo
Stay Updated with the Latest Cricket News from Cricket Addictor.

You will receive the latest updates on cricket news throughout the day. You can manage them whenever you need in browser settings.