
Cummins winning the man of the match award on his Test debut,against South Africa in 2011.Credit:Getty Images
Cummins’ Test debut in South Africa in 2011 remains legendary,not least because he hit the winning runs. As an 18-year-old overseas without his parents for the first time,he had the month of his life. A close friendship was formed with Mitch Marsh,the other young member of the touring squad,while nightly dinners with the likes of Shane Watson and Mike Hussey left him asking more questions than he ever had at school.
The first Test in Cape Town famously twisted about six ways in a couple of hours,bewildering everyone. But on debut in the second Test of the series,in Johannesburg in November 2011,Cummins retained the calm and confidence he’d displayed for his state. “This might sound disrespectful,but I remember looking from afar and thinking,‘Wow,these guys are super-heroes,’ then when I played alongside them I thought,‘Well,they’re not doing anything I can’t do.’ I felt that really quickly.”
How,then,did the 18-year-old get to understand the Australian team dressing room,with all its personalities,histories and pressures? “Chris Hadfield,in his bookAn Astronaut’s Guide to Life on Earth,had the idea that if you go into a new environment,you don’t have to be a ‘plus one’ addition to start with,just be a zero. So even if you’re at the top of your game and have been brought into a new role,you just have to do no damage,get the lie of the land,and be passive for a while because you and everyone else will learn the right rhythm. That’s always been me.”
Initially,the foot stress injury Cummins brought home from South Africa did not seem a huge issue. He was still part of the build-up to the home summer,and promotions for the first season of the Big Bash League. On opening night at the SCG,he was a jovial presence at the Cricket Australia function in the Victor Trumper Stand,and by mid-next year he was back in the white-ball team in the UK.
“This might sound disrespectful,but I remember looking from afar and thinking,‘Wow,these guys are super-heroes,’ then when I played alongside them I thought,‘Well,they’re not doing anything I can’t do.’”
But then problems mounted:a side strain,followed by a second back stress fracture,then a third – the one he was dealing with when he met Becky. There was,as recounted by some Cricket Australia and Cricket NSW fitness and medical staff,a constant tension between Cummins’ prodigious ability and the need for him to be patient with his body,termed a “Ferrari engine in a Corolla chassis” by one physio.
What helped Cummins was his enrolment at the University of Technology Sydney,to study business and marketing. Not just for the subjects,but for the maintenance of normality,the continuation of friendships,and the navigation of young adult tasks like figuring out which trains to catch,how to enrol in subjects,where to go for beers after lectures:North Sydney’s Greenwood on a Thursday night. “Uni was a place of comfort with people who had known me for a long time and didn’t really care if I did well in cricket,” he says.
“I’d signed up[at 17] before I knew cricket was going to take off,and part of it was an insecurity of still feeling unproven. As stupid as it sounds,I remember the ACA[Australian Cricketers’ Association] helping to chip in and pay for uni,and I thought,‘What a deal,they’re saving me a couple of grand here,I’d be an idiot not to.’ ”
Justine Whipper,formerly the personal development manager at Cricket NSW and now in an overarching role for the ACA,says the way Cummins built wider interests is now a much greater part of player education than a decade ago. “If you’re not doing anything outside of cricket,well your future is completely up to everybody else,” she says. “But if you start to develop yourself and explore,then that becomes under your control.”
One physio termed Cummins’ injury-prone body a “Ferrari engine in a Corolla chassis”.
Once Becky arrived on the scene,it was she who spent more time away,back with her family in the UK. The relationship grew more organically than most in international cricket:picture an early-20s montage of house renovations,beach time at Sydney’s Clovelly,barbecues and beer gardens. Whenever possible,the couple escape to a farm they own in the NSW Southern Highlands:it was there in February 2020 that Cummins proposed.
“More than anything,just the normality of routine together is what I loved the most and still love the most,” he says. “What’s the quote,‘You don’t miss doing something with someone,you miss doing nothing with someone’? That rings true.
“In some ways I had hoped that it might be the calm before the storm. These might be the quiet years – and if everything goes well and I’m away,we might not experience this for a long time.”

Cummins,fiancée Becky Boston and Norman the dog at the couple’s NSW Southern Highlands farm,to which they escape whenever possible.Credit:Getty Images
Ever since he first picked upHarry Potter as a child,Cummins has been a voracious reader. He balances fiction and non-fiction,science,business and philosophy,downloading tomes to his Kindle whenever he sees something that catches his eye – through his reading glasses. Occasionally,he will keep a hard copy on his travels. At the moment,that book isAwareness by Anthony de Mello. Others have includedSapiens:A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari,and Skin in the Game by Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
Cummins has also indulged in deep conversation with teammate Usman Khawaja,who recalls a bracing debate about science,faith and evolution. “Because I’m very religious and he’s not religious at all,we’ve had really good conversations around religion and life,and it’s actually been really in-depth,” Khawaja says. “I think he finds it hard that I’ve always loved science and I’m religious.”
Reading – and listening – were hallmarks of how Cummins reflected on the Australian team’s “sandpapergate” ball-tampering scandal in South Africa in 2018. He took a week off with Becky upon his return to Australia,phone off to keep out the noise,then got thinking. “There were a few things you’d never thought about in terms of the bigger context,” he recalls. “It’s moments like that when you remember you’re an Australian cricketer and you’ve got a huge responsibility.”
“I know I’ve got a certain amount of energy and I want to spend that on bowling,not waste it getting caught up in other things.”
After dominant teams led by Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting,subsequent Australian sides have seemed at times to be trying to play the roles they once saw on TV,rather than simply being themselves.
“You try to be aggressive and in the face of the other team as a 12-year-old because that’s how you think Australian cricket is. There’s something to that,there’s been a lot of success and that is part of it,” says Cummins. “But the more I play,the more I’ve mellowed,purely for performance reasons. I know I’ve got a certain amount of energy and I want to spend that on bowling,not waste it getting caught up in other things.“
Then turning 25,he also realised he could no longer see himself as the youngest guy in a dressing room dictated by older men around him. “Okay,now I’m a full-time Australian cricketer playing all three formats,time to grow up a bit,” he says. “Even in South Africa in 2018 I was the youngest player in that Test match,and from that moment on … there was a shift from one of the younger,inexperienced half of the team to the experienced and senior half of the side.”

Cummins and teammate Usman Khawaja have had deep chats about religion. “He’s a very humble character,” says Khawaja. “He treats people nicely.”Credit:Getty Images
When he returned from a back injury to the Test team against India in Adelaide in December 2018,other players and staff noticed Cummins now had the capacity to call things out he didn’t like. Some boorish dressing-room language,for instance. “I’ve got a little bit stronger on a few things,” he concedes. “I love the guys who I play alongside;it isn’t just a hobby or even a job.
We spend more time with this group than we do with our partners at home. So I don’t like problems festering. I don’t want to spend 70 per cent of my life on tour in an environment I’m not totally comfortable with.
“The non-negotiable for teams is that we want to bring a range of diverse thinking and people together. At times that’s been squandered,or you’ve got 30 alpha males on a tour,so there’s going to be times when someone doesn’t fit that kind of mould,and they might feel ostracised.”
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There is some crossover with Cummins’ other interests. Driven by his parents’ involvement in charitable activities – to this day,they are part of a local feed-the-homeless program every Wednesday night – Cummins has built relationships with UNICEF,climate change initiatives and the anti-racism campaign Reflect Forward. He’s also taken by how “doing things the right way” can now be a competitive advantage. “It’s been a real inflection point in the past couple of years,where if you try to do the right thing,it’s been great to see companies that are rewarded,” he says. “I love seeing the socially conscious companies win. It all comes from consumers and new generations demanding that things are done right.”
“Those couple of per cent gains in performance don’t come from skill acquisition or technique.”
Two leaders Cummins regards highly are England’s Eoin Morgan and the former New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum. He’s worked with both for the Kolkata Knight Riders franchise in the Indian Premier League. What the trio share is a belief that,at the top,improvements come from relieving pressure:something that did not take place to a great-enough extent in South Africa in 2018,nor in performances in some more recent series,such as last summer’s home matches against India.
“Those couple of per cent gains in performance don’t come from skill acquisition or technique,” Cummins says. “If we’ve got a young guy who’s come into the side,I don’t think senior players or coaches changing his technique and telling him exactly how to bowl or bat are going to have as much of a positive impact as if he feels welcome,and he’s encouraged to do all the things that got him there. If we can relieve a little bit of that pressure everyone feels playing professional sport in front of millions of people,that’s where the biggest value is to be had.”
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These were some of the themes tackled in the unprecedented recent meeting between Cummins,the then Test captain Tim Paine and white-ball captain Aaron Finch with CA’s chief executive Nick Hockley and the then chair Earl Eddings,to discuss the team environment. On the evidence of the recent T20 World Cup,at which victory was accompanied bycoach Justin Langer declaring the squad “embraced fun”,the environment is now being moulded in a more relaxed,player-driven manner than during the past three years.
“The most important part of my role is to look after our players and listen to them,make sure they’re heard,so I tried to do that as best as I could,” Cummins says of that meeting. “Everyone likes everything out there,and no secrets,and I thought it was really important that we got together and put it all on the table.”

With Tim Paine,whom Cummins replaced as captain.Credit:Getty Images
The question of whether a fast bowler could be Australian Test captain was answered partly by the way Tim Paine ended conservatism about giving the same role to a wicketkeeper. Certainly,the former selection chair Trevor Hohns thinks so. “Over the last 12 to 18 months we’ve shown our hand a little bit with Pat,” Hohns says. “As a fast bowler,who knows whether he’s going to be able to play every game. The way to get around that,of course,is to have a good deputy to step up if Pat were to get injured. That deputy would have to be somebody who could take over as captain,not just somebody who is a good second-in-command.” That deputy is Steve Smith,who as a former captain will be able to do exactly that.
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Cummins got his first glimpse of captaincy with NSW in one-day cricket last summer. “It’s amazing how you’re there doing your shoelaces up and you’ve got 10 different people there:the bowling coach coming to give you a little tip,or the physio comes to say someone is going to be right to play. You’re just in demand.”
Having lived through the ball-tampering scandal and a cultural review of the Australian men’s team,Cummins appreciates the wider significance of captaincy,but also counsels consideration of the relative ages of athletes;similar,he says,to those of young musicians or actors,as opposed to corporate CEOs.
“A captain does have a lot of responsibility. You’re going to have 10 different personalities,ages,backgrounds;you’ve got to have some kind of range to be able to get the best out of all those players. You’re also looking after a wider support crew of maybe 15 to 20 people on tour,all older than you,more life experience,experts in different fields. So you do need to have a bit more breadth than purely cricket.”
Khawaja believes Cummins’ humility will make him a strong leader. “Patty has always been really good at that,he’s been open and welcoming to different people,” he says. “His parents are lovely,too;you can tell he’s come from a good upbringing. I’ve seen the way he treats other people,you can just see it straight away. He’s a very humble character,he treats people nicely.”
One of the hardest things for any bowler-captain is the need to think outside themselves even when exhausted. Cummins spoke gracefully to the travelling media about half an hour after Ben Stokes’ 2019 Headingley heist in Leeds,in which Australia lost a supposedly unlosable Test match,even as the dressing room remained in a state of shock. But I remind him of how exasperated he appeared on the final evening of the Old Trafford Test in Manchester a few days later,when his last involvement in the match consisted of a volley of bouncers at the England tail.
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“I was super-frustrated,” he concedes. “I felt like Headingley got away from us. I thought we should’ve won at Lord’s,too,so I remember thinking,‘Surely,we can’t have another one that slips away.’ It was an amazing feeling when we finally reclaimed the Ashes by winning at Old Trafford,but from the time that match finished until the fifth and final Test at the Oval,I was spent. I put everything into that Test.
“You see people win premierships in AFL or NRL and they go on a two-week bender. Whereas in cricket you come to the end of a Test series and everyone’s ready to go home and sleep for a few days.”
Those moments are the biggest question about whether you could be a good Test captain,I say,because that’s how tiring fast bowling can be. “That is one of them,and the other question is just about bowling myself,” he replies. “Do you have a good enough feel for how much you need to bowl or not bowl? But they’re problems that can be solved.[As captain],I won’t be out there alone. If I was exhausted and knew I wasn’t going to be thinking clearly enough and someone else had more to offer,I’d be very comfortable just hand-balling to them at times.”

“If we can relieve a little bit of that pressure everyone feels playing professional sport in front of millions of people,that’s where the biggest value is to be had.” Credit:Damian Bennett
As we speak,Cummins has one eye on our chat window and one on the baby monitor of his son,Albie.Albie was born on October 8,only a day later than the couple and Cricket Australia had mapped out in their summer schedule six months beforehand. Well-planned as this was,the new parents then still had the wrenching experience of Cummins’ rapid departure overseas to the United Arab Emirates for the T20 World Cup.
“I’m really glad he was there for the birth because I don’t think I could’ve done it without him,” Becky enthuses. “However looking back,him leaving the day after we got home from hospital was the most ridiculous,hardest thing … it was terrible timing. But I wouldn’t have had it any other way;he got to be there,of course,and you’ve got to do what you’ve got to do.”
“I’m really glad he was there for the birth …[But] him leaving the day after we got home from hospital was the most ridiculous,hardest thing.”
Parenthood is the most fundamental way in which Cummins defines himself,apart from cricket. As Australia’s next Test captain,he knows he’ll be missing a lot of treasured private moments to create many more public ones.
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When Becky explains she’s been “holding up” Albie to mimic the opening scene inThe Lion King while listening to the soundtrack,all of us laugh,as Cummins exclaims,“I didn’t know that.” Then his tone changes to something softer,and more fatherly. “I think I need to get home,” he says.
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