Hussain made his Test cricket debut in 1990 against the
West Indies with the match ending just before lunch on the final day. England won the test by nine wickets, but lost the series 2–1. Hussain was subsequently not picked for the next three years. He was regarded as a bit of a "hot-head", and his fiery temper briefly jeopardised his prospects of an international career. At Essex, Hussain continued to score runs and impressed his county colleague and England captain Graham Gooch enough to have a Test reprieve. He was thus selected for the 3rd Ashes Test of 1993, in which he scored 71 and 47 not out, ensuring his selection for the rest of the series. It was enough to secure his place for the subsequent winter tour of the West Indies. Before the Test series, Hussain participated in a warm-up match against
St Kitts and Nevis, in which he was dismissed for a
duck by
John "The Dentist" Maynard, and subsequently, again was not picked for the next three years of Test matches. Hussain was picked again for a Test series against India in the summer of 1996. The number 3 batting position had been troublesome for England for some time. England had tried all manner of combinations at No. 3, from the left-field
Jason Gallian to the veteran
Robin Smith, via the temperamentally suspect pairing of
Graeme Hick and Mark Ramprakash. "A lot is made of your batting position," Hussain recalled to ESPNcricinfo, "but I always felt, and I did back then when
David Lloyd rang me up and asked me to bat No. 3, that if you're good enough to be playing Test cricket, you should be good enough to move from No. 5 to No. 3". Hussain scored 128 in the first innings. Hussain was awarded Man of The Match and with another century in the last Test that summer was awarded Man of the Series.
Test captain Hussain was the
captain of the England team for 45
Test matches from 1999 to 2003; as of 2021 the sixth most for an England captain, with his 17 Test victories the seventh most as England captain. His percentage of Tests won was higher than any of the previous eight captains since
Bob Willis retired in 1984. Hussain became Test captain in July 1999, taking over from Alec Stewart for the series against
New Zealand at home, after which he was booed by the England fans as he and his team stood on the pavilion balcony. In 2000 he led England to a 3–1 victory over the
West Indies at home, and in that winter, the England team beat both
Pakistan and
Sri Lanka away. Under Hussain, England won four Test series in a row and rose to third place in the ICC Test Championship table when it was launched, after being ninth and last in the prototype Wisden World Championship in September 1999. Hussain was captain of both the Test and
One Day International England teams until after the
2003 Cricket World Cup, when England failed to make the second round after boycotting their match against
Zimbabwe in
Harare, citing security concerns. But as he stated in his autobiography
Playing With Fire, the whole Zimbabwe question and the responsibility of whether or not to play against Zimbabwe was left to the captain and it was a question that "kept him awake at night". Immediately after the 2003 Cricket World Cup, he stepped down as one-day captain, being replaced by
Michael Vaughan. Later in 2003, Hussain announced his retirement as Test captain after England's Test series against
South Africa, again being replaced by Vaughan. Hussain continued as a batsman in the Test team until May 2004; in his final Test, against New Zealand at
Lord's, he scored 34 and 103 not out, hitting the winning runs.
Sachin Tendulkar wrote in his autobiography
Playing It My Way: My Autobiography that Among the Captains I have played against, I consider Nasser Hussein the best. He was an excellent strategist ... He was a very good thinker about the game and was proactive. Nasser would not place a fielder in a particular position after a shot was played. Rather, he had the ability to anticipate the shot and would place a fielder well in advance, making a real difference to his team. Hussain has the record of the most consecutive Test
tosses lost as captain, losing 10 in a row between November 2000 and December 2001. ==One Day Internationals==