Joe Root's legacy as captain remains undetermined, but he has credit in the bank

Comparisons with history’s unreliable memory are unfair to Root’s captaincy

George Dobell12-Aug-2020We’ve all seen the polls of England’s best captains. Invariably, Mike Brearley wins a mention. Douglas Jardine, too. And of more recent vintages, the likes of Andrew Strauss and Nasser Hussain.All deserve their fine reputations. It’s pretty much impossible to compare eras, but they all have compelling cases in very different ways.But what about Joe Root? For Root has now led England to victory in 23 Tests including his last six in succession. One more victory will draw him level with Alastair Cook (who captained England 59 times) and Andrew Strauss (50) and put him just two behind Michael Vaughan, who led England to victory in a record 26 Tests (51).This Test at the Ageas Bowl will be Root’s 43rd as captain. Which means his win percentage – 54.76 – is better than any of them. If England win again, it will be the longest win sequence for an England captain since Percy Chapman in 1930. Sounds pretty good, doesn’t it?Ultimately, captains probably aren’t judged on such stats. Not entirely, anyway. The changing pace of modern cricket has resulted in fewer draws so, impressive though Root’s win percentage as leader may be (higher than Clive Lloyd’s, Imran Khan’s, MS Dhoni’s and Michael Clarke’s, among many others), his loss percentage is also high. At 35.71, it’s higher (far higher in some cases) than any of those mentioned other than Cook.