Speight cites Brook’s failures with Young England as an 18-year-old and his poor second full season in county cricket as reasons for his current success.”He went away after those disappointments and decided he had to work it out. He made the decision to start again himself. I didn’t ring him. He phoned me and asked me to help. He was determined enough to do that and he wanted to succeed.”Although he has worked with the likes of Gale, Paul Grayson, Ottis Gibson and Ali Maiden in his time with Yorkshire, Brook continues to go and see Speight from time to time.”They’ve got a wonderful understanding and a connection, which I think is really healthy,” says Lyth, Brook’s Yorkshire opening partner, “and Speighty probably knows his game as well as Harry does.”Opening the batting has actually probably made him a better player and more equipped for him to go into the middle order.”He trusts his defence a lot more now. He’s got such a solid defence and you need that to play first-class cricket, let alone Test cricket, but then what he also has got is the attacking game and a natural flair, which comes out a hell of a lot when he’s batting.”Nortje who? Brook pulls the South Africa quick bowler during his 80 in his second ODI, in Bloemfontein earlier this year•Marco Longari/AFP/Getty ImagesThe fruits of Brook’s labours during his early years in the first-class game began to ripen in 2022. It now appears to have been foreordained that just when England’s Test fortunes were entrusted to Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes, Brook would have jaws dropping with his own exploits.His profile looked ideal for the new style, and he had all the shots of a high-class white-ball game to call upon. He made 967 championship runs at 107.44, hammering three hundreds and six fifties in his 13 innings in Yorkshire’s ill-fated campaign last year.”I think I probably fit the script fairly well,” Brook suggests. “Just the way I play positive cricket, trying to always put the bowler under pressure.”Even so, he was made to wait until his county colleague Jonny Bairstow’s freak golfing injury allowed him a first opportunity.His Test debut, against South Africa, was all about the experience rather than the runs. “I think the goosebump moment was actually walking out to do the national anthem,” he says.”Because the Queen had died, we walked out and I’ve never felt or heard anything so silent. You could hear a pin drop. Then, obviously, as soon as we started the national anthem, it erupted.”Annus horribilis: Brook made a hundred in the 2019 county season but ended up averaging just 22, with 12 scores of under 20 in his 17 innings•Alex Davidson/Getty ImagesThat England won inside two days is now part of Bazball folklore. That Brook went on to score four sumptuous centuries in the space of eight Test innings may, in time, become part of his legend.His magnificent Test-best 186 from just 176 balls in the first innings of the Wellington Test this year was followed by his first Test wicket (New Zealand’s greatest Test run-scorer, Kane Williamson), before the cricketing gods reminded him of the Ts and Cs of the sport with a diamond duck – he was run out without facing a ball in the second innings.It’s hard to believe this is a man who averaged just 28 in first-class cricket prior to 2022 and only had an average of 36 runs per innings from 56 first-class matches as recently as when he made his England debut last September.”It’s been a bit of a stellar year,” he says. “I don’t know if I’m ever going to be able to top it, to be honest. The last few months have been like a dream come true. The main thing was to come home with a medal and be a world champion.”Having seen his influential input at international level thus far, few now doubt Brook’s ability, least of all Speight.”Back in school days, he’d come in on a morning, before lessons, and have an hour and 40 or an hour and 50 minutes, every day. He loves the game. He loves batting.With Yorkshire team-mate Joe Root in a Blast game against Worcestershire last year, where they sealed a win with a partnership of 87 off 44 balls•Getty Images”His whole mindset is that if it’s not right, he’ll work and work and work to get his basics right before he goes on and does anything else. When he came to see me [in January] before he went to South Africa, he spent 20 minutes at the start just getting everything right. Then he wanted to work on pulling and whacking over wide mid-on, midwicket, back-of-a-length balls, which we worked on.”Then he went back, had a couple of chats, then he had another 20 minutes going right back to the basics again.”Those basics have changed since Brook began to put his front foot forward in first-class cricket. “When he was at school Harry stood still,” says Speight, who also works with other Yorkshire players.”He didn’t trigger or have a pre-delivery movement. I made sure that his alignment was perfect and he didn’t twist out towards midwicket. We didn’t want his bat coming across the line of the ball. We did that every day for four years.”If you look at his innings at Lord’s in 2017, against the likes of Steven Finn, he was fine [Brook made 38 in Yorkshire’s first innings against Middlesex] but over the next year or so he started coming out of alignment. His hips would open up and his shoulders would open more. A bit like a piece of fusilli pasta. His bat ended up sliding across third, fourth or fifth slip, and anything moving, he ended up nicking it or missing it. Even a straight ball on occasions.”If you’re a fraction early, you’re going to end up nicking it. If you’re a fraction late, it’s going to go through the gate.”In 2018, Brook called Speight for help. Grabs from some of the messages exchanged between the pair provide fascinating insight, both visual and verbal, into those technical changes”He sent me the videos from earlier in the year. We looked at that and decided he’d try using a trigger movement.”Brook’s stance in 2018, at the time of delivery and immediately after it, with his shoulders and hips opening up and bat coming down from slipBrook had already done some research and found a video of AB de Villiers talking about his triggers. He decided he’d take a page out of the AB book.”We started work on that and continued all the way through Covid,” Speight says. “By putting a trigger in, it loaded his core up ready to move and helped to align his body properly so that his bat could come down in a straight path.”It worked, in part: “Then in Covid year they played four of five games [in the Bob Willis Trophy]. He did well at Durham and got runs against Nottinghamshire but then he didn’t kick on.”He was opening his hips up too much, so we fine-tuned that. Once we sorted that trigger out and got his weight 60-40 to his front foot, we got his head over the top of his body instead of drifting outside off stump. We worked hard on that on an ongoing basis.Brook in 2019 (left) and a year after”He realised that if his head was in the right position and his trigger was right, he shouldn’t miss it, and that’s still the basis of his game.”I watched the dismissal in the first one-day international in South Africa and his toe had gone an inch too far outside off stump. As a result his head got slightly out of line and of course, he played round it rather than hitting through it.”And of his innings in the Wellington Test, Speight says: “All that happened there was that he and Joe [Root, who also got a hundred] worked out that if they stood still where you normally would, one foot either side of the crease, there would be a ball with their name on it.”So Brooky tried to move outside the crease. He was all over the place in terms of his starting point but his movement remained the same from whatever starting position he set himself and he was able to master them.”It gave the New Zealand bowlers little margin for error, because when there was any width through the off side, he was so well balanced, he was able to deal with both back-foot and front-foot shots with equal precision.”Ultimately Brook’s desire and willingness to work hard at his game, and his belief in Speight’s methods and his eye for detail, have brought him rewards.”He’s just got an all-round game for both red and white that is absolutely perfect,” says Lyth, himself a superb exponent at the top of the order in all formats. “I’m sure he’ll be an all-format cricketer for England for a long time. He’s got everything. The only things he can’t do are bowl and play football.”It doesn’t take long for comparisons to surface where players enjoying success are concerned. Both Lyth and Speight separately suggest that Brook is showing a Kevin Pietersen-like aptitude for his batting.”To me, he’s playing a different game [than] most people at the moment. Test cricket is not easy and he’s making it look pretty easy,” Lyth says.He also thinks Brook will face his biggest challenge yet this summer. “Ashes cricket is different, but knowing Harry like I do, he will relish that challenge. He plays pace bowling really well and he plays spin well, so it will come down to him making good decisions for long periods of time.”In Test cricket he’s already done that, so for me it’s just a case of him carrying on playing as he is and he’ll be fine.”Elite sport demands more than just ability and hard work. It also requires a good temperament to ride the inevitable troughs that punctuate the peaks. Speight says Brook is well equipped on that front. “He has an innate self-belief. He doesn’t look nervous when he walks out to bat, does he?Take cover: Brook lashes one square in the Karachi Test, where he made 111 and England won the series 3-0•Matthew Lewis/Getty Images”So whether he is or he isn’t nervous, he trusts himself from ball one. To be successful, you have to have that. It’s what separates the best few players from the rest.”When you look at Kevin Pietersen, how many times did people question his temperament? Yet look at what he produced. Harry will make mistakes, lots of them but if you look at his temperament, he doesn’t seem to have too much trouble getting in. If he gets in, he will score runs just like [Pietersen] did.”In the dressing room, Brook says his former team-mate Gary Ballance was someone he particularly looked up to and who helped him most of all. “I used to spend quite a lot of time with Gaz. We had loads of conversations. Stats don’t lie and his stats are probably some of the best you’ll see in county cricket ever.”Just talking to him about how to score runs, how to convert those twenties and thirties into sixties and seventies and then trying to kick on and get big hundreds – I just picked his brains really, and tried to learn how he scored runs.”Taken across individual scores, Brook’s personal manhattan might have begun as a series of single-storey buildings with an occasional landmark structure popping up, but now the skyscrapers are beginning to cluster.The personal hiatus before his country came calling looks to have been perfect for him. As his game was changing, so too was England’s, and particularly in Test cricket. “They’re making us feel like we can do anything when we go out there,” Brook says. “We’re trying to put the bowlers under pressure but we’re not being reckless. We’re trying to soak up pressure in the pressure situations.”There’ll doubtless be a few of those when Australia come over in the summer and it will be fascinating to see how Brook and England handle them. It’s a pretty safe bet that there are unlikely to be any dull moments.

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