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Joe Root must continue to captain England along with the training set-up should not be divided between teams and the Test side in formats, says former assistant trainer Paul Farbrace.
Australia’s fourth-Test win watched them retain a draw in the last game and the urn would hand England their initial house Ashes series loss since 2001.
“Root is England’s top player,” Farbrace told BBC Radio 5 Live.
“Until summer his record as Test captain has been quite good.”
He added:”And yes, his runs average has dropped while he has been (from 52.8 to 38.4) – which has happened to each captain who has played the game likely.”
The 28-year-old, that took on the function at the beginning of 2017 directed the side at 2017-18 to a 4-0 series defeat at Australia.
However, his gain ratio total since skipper is better but Michael Vaughan’s from the previous 38 decades.
Farbrace added:”We need other people on peak of the sequence to score runs. It isn’t just Joe Root”
When his contract expires at the end of the month head coach Trevor Bayliss is put to leave his function.
Former captain Vaughan told BBC Radio 5 Live that the 56-year-old Australian did much better job with the”white-ball team than the red-ball team” and suggested it is”almost impossible” for one person to coach the Evaluation, one-day and Twenty20 teams.
However, when asked if the coaching set-up should be broken, Farbrace explained:”England have tried that earlier and it didn’t work last time.
“I think that there just has to be a single person, but maybe the balance does have to shift back towards red-ball cricket.
“We had a massive concentrate on white-ball cricket, which has been quite powerful – England won the World Cup for the very first time this past year.
“There has been a huge emphasis on attempting to do this and it’s been tough trying to win the Ashes and the World Cup in exactly the same year. And in the close of the day, the Australians really are a much better team and deserve to win this collection.”
The fifth and final Test starts in the Oval on Thursday.
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Analysis and opinion in the BBC’s cricket correspondent.
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