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Published 18 Apr, 2014 07:01am

Newell interviewed for England job

LONDON: Nottinghamshire’s Mick Newell said on Wednesday he was interviewed for the vacant England head coach role.

Newell, 49, is understood to be one on a list of candidates including Lancashire coach Peter Moores and Sussex cricket manager Mark Robinson.

England have been without a head coach since Andy Flower quit in January.

“I was told I’d got an interview and I got that interview this morning, so we’ll see what happens,” Nottinghamshire director of cricket Newell said.

Flower quit following this winter’s disastrous 5-0 Ashes defeat, and Newell had previously told the BBC’s Test Match Special he would be applying for the role, for which current England ODI and T20 head coach, Ashley Giles, is seen as the favourite.

Moores, who was axed from England’s top job in 2009, has also publically put himself forward as a candidate.

England chief executive David Collier said earlier this month that an appointment was ‘close’.

Newell feels the time was right to push his claims, having led Nottinghamshire for more than a decade, during which time he has won two County Championship titles.

His team also won the YB40 competition last year, the club’s first one-day trophy since 1991, while he has some international coaching experience with England Lions.

“In three or four years’ time I will be in my early to mid-50s and I think there will be a new generation of coaches coming through,” Newell added to BBC Radio. “From my perspective I feel this is my opportunity and that’s why I put my application in.”

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