One of the most decorated and vastly experienced coaches of the modern era, Peter Moores has held the role of Nottinghamshire Head Coach since 2016.
As well as being the only man in history to lead three different sides to the County Championship title, Moores has also coached England Men on two separate occasions.
A former wicketkeeper for Worcestershire and Sussex, the latter of whom he captained, Moores finished a 15-year playing career with just under 10,000 runs and almost 800 victims from behind the stumps in a total of 477 appearances across all formats.
He also spent a winter with Orange Free State in South Africa, winning the 50-over Benson & Hedges Series in 1989, as well as reaching the final of the NatWest Trophy with Sussex in 1993.
Upon retirement in 1998, Moores took the reins at Sussex, whom he would lead to the Championship title in 2003, before leaving in 2005 to become director of the English National Cricket Academy.
After two years in that role, he went on to land the full England job, leading the Three Lions to a Test series win in New Zealand and ODI victories in Sri Lanka and West Indies.
In January 2009, he left his role with the Three Lions, and shortly afterwards was appointed as head coach of Lancashire, guiding the Red Rose to their first Championship title in 77 years when they lifted the trophy in 2011.
Re-appointed as England head coach in April 2014, Moores won a home series against India, but again left the top job following the 2015 World Cup, after which he took on a coaching consultancy role at Trent Bridge before being elevated to the main role in September 2016.
For a decade, the Lancashire win made Moores the only man to lift the title with two different teams, before Mark Robinson matched the feat in 2021 - but an undeterred Moores pulled clear once more when the Green and Golds triumphed in 2025.
He has brought trophies across all three formats back to Nottinghamshire, as well as reaching the final of The Hundred as part of Trent Rockets Men’s coaching staff in 2025.
Away from Trent Bridge, he has undertaken stints with Melbourne Stars in Australia’s Big Bash League, serving as the ongoing head coach there since 2023, and Karachi Kings in the Pakistan Super League.
