1.What did you do to celebrate the win over India on Friday night?
By the time we got back to the hotel it was close to midnight. My wife Kate was there which was nice so we swung down to the bar and met up with the other partners and had a couple of drinks. We've got two young daughters (Holly, 7, and Charlie, 3) so I'd only had about three hours sleep when they got me up at 6am and it was back to reality. I'm not the type of guy to go out and celebrate and jump around like a mad man - my wife will tell you I'm no party animal - but there was definitely some quiet satisfaction there. We try to be as stable as we can. The nature of the game means there's plenty of highs and lows but if the players can see the support staff are generally pretty stable, it helps I think.
2. Have you answered your critics over the one day series, do you think?
The World Cup is still a huge thing for us and turning our test team around. [The one-day series] was just another tick in a box. Don't get me wrong, it was really exciting and pretty intense. But the one thing you learn pretty early on is no matter what you do you'll have people that will support you and you'll have people that won't. That doesn't change a lot with your performance.
3.Where does your self-belief come from?
I come from a broken family. My parents divorced when I was 3. My brother is 18 months older than me. My mum went to work fulltime and was really successful as a management consultant around the world. So we travelled a lot with her. We were pretty self reliant from a young age. That certainly helped in that you have to find a way to make things happen. You have to be integrated into different schools and different countries. We lived in Australia and Denmark and the UK. My mum was a very driven woman and that rubbed off on us. I was always allowed to do what I wanted to do and for me that was cricket. I could find cricket pretty much anywhere we went. I captained sides from a young age. Cricket certainly helped me make friends.
4.You travelled in childhood and you travel all the time now for work. Would you ever survive in an office job?
I'm not sure. I quite like the idea of when I finish coaching, relaxing at home and having a normal family life, if there is such a thing.