And therefore, Test cricket has a choice. Does it do much as England has done in recent campaigns, and corral itself off from the zeitgeist – picking from a range of barnacles, workhorses and as-yet untainted rookies, none of whom have yet put themselves forward for an IPL auction and most of whom are never likely to anyway? Or does it seek to be bold – and address T20’s dominance head-on by presenting itself as the means by which the very best can test the outer limits of their capabilities? Earn your living on the T20 circuit by all means, but step this way if you seek true greatness.That’s the option that McCullum’s arrival would seem to place back on the table. Even though England are officially splitting their Test and white-ball coaching roles – and rightly so given the insane workload that his predecessor Chris Silverwood was obliged to take on – this is actually an appointment that can unify the two teams’ philosophies.Apart from anything else, it makes a virtue of the fact that Morgan, the white-ball captain, is basically untouchable as English cricket’s grandmaster. McCullum was master of ceremonies at Morgan’s wedding, shares the same interests in horses and gambling, and last season they were the captain-coach alliance that propelled KKR to the IPL final. Irrespective of the differences between red- and white-ball cricket, you’d back them to craft a message that can be carried seamlessly from one format to the other, without the sort of compromises that Trevor Bayliss in particular was obliged to make in his approach to Test cricket.It’s fitting, too, that the first big Test (with a capital T) of McCullum’s methods will come at Lord’s against New Zealand next month. Everything that has been good about English cricket in the past decade seems to have had to pass this particular stress test – mostly notably the World Cup final in 2019, of course, but more pertinently in this case, the 2015 New Zealand Test in which England fleetingly showed a glimpse of what might have been had their white-ball prerogatives not got in the way.That was the match that had it all. England collapsed to 30 for 4 and won; New Zealand racked up 403 for 3 and lost, and central to the renaissance was the then-young alliance of Stokes and Joe Root. Only months earlier, Stokes had been omitted from England’s World Cup squad. Now he proved the folly of that decision with the fastest century ever seen at Lord’s, as well as – in New Zealand’s final-day chase – the first-ball dismissal of none other than McCullum, who had held himself back after the loss of three early wickets in the hope of instigating a “second launch” in their pursuit of a lofty 345. England can embrace the implications of being white-ball trendsetters under McCullum•BCCI”There’s an element of pride that we continue to play a style of cricket that gives us our greatest chance,” McCullum said after that match. “There will be times when teams can stand up to you and withstand the pressure and come out on top. You just have to doff the cap, say ‘well played’ and make sure next time you get the chance you go hard again and ask the same question.”It’s hard to imagine that an England team led by Stokes, with Root still in the form of his life, with Jonny Bairstow back to a red-ball focus, and maybe even with Jos Buttler reimbued with a sense of purpose after his miserable Ashes tour will need much persuasion to buy into that sort of a vision from McCullum.Buttler, in particular, is a fascinating case study. He was so clearly out of sorts in Australia – visibly overwhelmed at times by the limitless scope of Test cricket’s possibilities. And yet somehow he was able to park those negative vibes come the start of the IPL, and tap straight back into the domineering mindset with which he had romped through the group stages of the preceding T20 World Cup.A McCullum-Stokes Test team would surely wish to have Buttler as a central plank, but on his terms this time, with licence to play his natural game with a depth of batting options around him. That was the case in England’s short-lived experiment with “total cricket” in 2018, in fact, when the side was loaded with allrounders down to No. 10, so that the team’s big hitters had licence to trust their instincts, and the bowling had enough depth and variety to make every spell seem like an event.There’s no reason why, say, Alex Lees or Dom Sibley could not form a key part of such a rebooted England Test team – much as Alastair Cook’s unhurried excellence was crucial to that 2015 Lord’s Test – but it would have been on the terms dictated by the overall team philosophy, and not simply because they are likely to sell their wickets for a higher price than most.After all, the game has evolved dramatically since Test cricket was last the overriding priority for England. At the recent Under-19 World Cup, the generation that grew up watching Morgan’s white-ball revolution marched into the final with an array of drives, sweeps and ramps that might have been grafted directly from the men they had been idolising from the age of 13.It won’t be long before the likes of Jacob Bethell, Tom Prest and George Bell are pushing for Test recognition, and there won’t be much point in forcing the white-ball genie back into the bottle when they get there. And frankly, why would you want to? As McCullum knows only too well, having reframed New Zealand as a team it needed to be, and not simply a less convincing version of Australia, if you’re not true to yourself, you’re lying to everyone.England, in spite of the constant angst, have been white-ball trend-setters for the best part of a decade now. This appointment could be the first step towards fully embracing the implications.

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