
"They [the fans] have every right to be annoyed. I've made a terrible mistake. I've put myself in a situation which I shouldn't have done. Did it affect my cricket? I don't think so. I'd have still played the same way. Obviously, I didn't get a score that I'd have liked, but I still played the same way. I'm extremely sorry to all the supporters for what I did in New Zealand. I've got to try and regain their trust again in my ability, in my cricket on the field and off the field."
"I'm extremely sorry to all the supporters for what I did in New Zealand. I've got to try and regain their trust again in my ability, in my cricket on the field and off the field. I'm hoping that they can expect I'll be slightly different away from the game. I'll be more professional. That's what I've got to do now for the rest of my career, hopefully. I just want to be back playing as good cricket as I possibly can be."
Harry Brook will captain England in the first of three ODIs in Sri Lanka after a difficult winter marked by off-field controversy and on-field failures. Brook was involved in an altercation with a nightclub doorman in New Zealand, was fined and given a final warning, and accepts fans have reason to be annoyed. He says the incident did not change how he played but apologises and pledges greater professionalism off the field. Brook acknowledges England's wider distractions, including accusations of a drinking culture during the Ashes tour, and recognises the need to lead by example.
Read at 101GREATGOALS.COM
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