Tag: Justin Langer

  • Jay Shah clarifies the reports of BCCI approaching Australian cricketers for Team India’s head coach role

    Jay Shah clarifies the reports of BCCI approaching Australian cricketers for Team India’s head coach role

    Recently, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) initiated a call for applications to fill the position of head coach for the senior national men’s cricket team. As Rahul Dravid‘s tenure draws to a close in June 2024, the board is actively scouting for qualified individuals to take on this role, which entails a term of 3.5 years.

    Following remarks by BCCI Secretary Jay Shah indicating the board’s openness to considering foreign candidates, speculation has been rife regarding potential contenders for the position.

    Rumours have also surrounded Justin Langer‘s potential candidacy for the coaching role, but he recently issued a statement regarding his stance on the matter.

    Justin Langer’s stand on the head coach role

    Langer described the job as remarkable, yet he declined it, citing the immense pressure involved. Having already served in a similar role for Australia for four years, Langer expressed his reservations. Additionally, he mentioned receiving advice from KL Rahul, who cautioned against accepting the offer from BCCI due to the significantly higher levels of pressure and politics within the national team compared to IPL franchises.

    A few days ago, former Australian captain Ricky Ponting revealed that he, too, turned down an offer from BCCI due to personal reasons. Ponting stated that he was not prepared to take on the role at the current moment.

    Also READ: Fans react as Justin Langer declines Team India’s head coach role after KL Rahul’s ‘politics’ advice

    Jay Shah’s clarification on the issue

    The day following Langer’s disclosure of declining an offer to coach the Indian men’s cricket team, prompted by individuals within the BCCI, the board secretary Shah made it clear that the BCCI had not approached any former Australian cricketer with a coaching proposition.

    “Neither I nor the BCCI have approached any former Australian cricketer with a coaching offer. The reports circulating in certain media sections are completely incorrect,” said the BCCI secretary in a statement.

    Also READ: Zimbabwe legend Andy Flower shares his thoughts on India’s head coach role

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  • ‘If you think there’s pressure and politics in an IPL team, multiply that by a thousand’ – KL Rahul’s message to Justin Langer on India coach role

    ‘If you think there’s pressure and politics in an IPL team, multiply that by a thousand’ – KL Rahul’s message to Justin Langer on India coach role

    Former Australia cricketer and current Lucknow Super Giants head coach Justin Langer was approached by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to consider taking up the role of the head coach in the Indian team. However, the 53-year-old turned down the proposition and stated it is not the kind of responsibility he wants to take up at the moment.

    Explaining his reasons, Langer mentioned that he had a chat with India cricketer KL Rahul, who interestingly mentioned that there is a lot of politics and pressure that the former Australia international needs to deal with if he takes up the role. He considered it to be ‘good advice’ and eventually opted out of it. However, Langer kept the door open for the future as he considered it to be an ‘awesome job.’

    “It would be an amazing job, (but) I have (put myself out of contention). I also know that it’s an all-encompassing role, and having done it for four years with the Australian team, honestly, it’s exhausting. And that’s the Australian job,” Langer said on BBC’s Stumped podcast.

    Also Read – Justin Langer opts out of race for head coach of Team India

    “You never say never. And the pressure of doing it in India… I was talking to KL Rahul and he said, ‘You know, if you think there’s pressure and politics in an IPL team, multiply that by a thousand, (that’s) coaching India. That was a good bit of advice, I guess. It would be an awesome job, but not for me at the moment,” he added. 

    Meanwhile, former cricketer and current Delhi Capitals head coach Ricky Ponting too opted out after BCCI approached him earlier at the moment. Ponting, who has been named the new head coach of Washington Freedom in the MLC stated that taking up the role of the head coach of the Indian cricket team would require him to remain away from the family for almost a year, which is something that doesn’t suit his lifestyle.

    Also Read Ricky Ponting opens up on approach for India’s head coach role

    Among Indians, Gautam Gambhir has been approached by the BCCI and the two parties are expected to meet after the IPL final on May 26. On the other hand, as per reports, Harbhajan Singh has expressed his desire to take up the role. Among foreigners, BCCI officials are in touch with Stephen Fleming and Mahela Jayawardene.

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  • Australian Justin Langer “Curious and Fascinated” to replace Rahul Dravid as Team India’s next coach

    Australian Justin Langer “Curious and Fascinated” to replace Rahul Dravid as Team India’s next coach

    Image Credit: Instagram

    As the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) invites applications for the role of Team India’s head coach, former Australian coach Justin Langer says, he is “curious” about it. The head coach’s seat will be vacant in Indian cricket after incumbent Rahul Dravid completes his extended tenure at the conclusion of the upcoming T20 World Cup 2024.

    The BCCI, on Monday, officially forwarded the development to invite fresh applications for the role.

    “We will call for applicants in the next few days. Rahul Dravid’s tenure is coming to an end. If he wants to reapply, he can,” BCCI secretary Jay Shah told select media on Thursday. “We are looking for a long-term coach, for three years.”

    Notably, Rahul Dravid was roped into Team India for the head coach’s role by the BCCI back in November 2021, initially, for a two-year period. The contract had expired after the last ODI World Cup, which was held in India, however, due to the impending T20 World Cup 2024, the cricket board extended the contract for a year.

    Now with the completion of the T20 World Cup 2024 in June, Rahul Dravid will have to step down from his head coach’s chair, unless he wishes to reapply.

    Meanwhile, Justin Langer, who is one of the potential candidates for the role, said, though, he has never thought about it, but he is curious.

    “Well, I am curious,” Langer said told TOI when asked whether he would apply for the post. “I’ve never ever thought about it. I have deep respect for any international coach because I understand the pressure, but coaching the Indian team would be an extraordinary role. From what I’ve seen with the amount of talent I’ve seen in this country, it would be fascinating,” he added.

    Australian Justin Langer "Curious and Fascinated" to replace Rahul Dravid as Team India's next coach
    Image Source: Twitter

    Currently, Langer is involved with Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) as the head coach of the team. The KL Rahul-led LSG has done decently so far, although, they are yet to qualify for the IPL 2024 playoffs. Prior to this appointment of his, Langer was Australia’s full-time coach, under whom Australia lifted its maiden T20 World Cup title in 2021.

    Langer is credited for reviving Australian cricket following the infamous sandpaper gate scandal in 2018. However, he quit the role citing “bull**** politics” within the Cricket Australia (CA).

    Meanwhile, Team India last had the services of an overseas coach close to a decade ago. Former Zimbabwe cricketer Dunken Fletcher held the head coach’s role in the Indian side between 2011 and 2015. He was later replaced by Anil Kumble.

    ALSO READ: Big Trouble for RCB, RR, PBKS: No Jos Buttler, Will Jacks, Livingstone for rest of the IPL 2024 | England Players leave IPL midway due to T20 World Cup 2024

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  • ‘If we have team success, everyone will be rewarded’ – Justin Langer notes importance of IPL performances for T20 World Cup selection

    ‘If we have team success, everyone will be rewarded’ – Justin Langer notes importance of IPL performances for T20 World Cup selection

    Justin Langer, Lucknow Super Giants’ (LSG) head coach, outlined the importance of the forthcoming Indian Premier League (IPL) for players vying to get a spot in the much-awaited 2024 ICC T20 World Cup. The marquee event is scheduled to commence on June 2 and will be co-hosted by the United States of America and the West Indies. 

    Ahead of the 17th edition of the IPL, Langer stated that the players will be rewarded if the team succeeds. He added that there are chances for the players to secure their spot in the T20 World Cup and they should keep that in mind when they perform for Lucknow.

    “If we have team success, everyone will be rewarded. That’ll be the message for all the players, including Bishi (Ravi Bishnoi) and KL (Rahul), and there’s a few others who will be vying for T20 World Cup spots. That’s all part of the game we play. The more they concentrate on playing well for Lucknow, the more their chances of being selected will increase,” Langer was quoted as saying by ICC.

    Also read: ‘He’ll be around for the first time’ – Justin Langer on KL Rahul’s availability ahead of IPL 2024

    Langer went on to speak about LSG skipper KL Rahul who is set to return to the field after being sidelined since the opening match of the recently concluded Test series against England owing to a quadriceps tendon injury. The wicketkeeper-batter has been deemed fit and hitting lots of balls in the nets, according to the coach.

    “Everyone’s looking forward to seeing him (KL Rahul). We know he has worked very hard to tick off all his return-to-play protocols. He’s worked very hard. He’s been practicing, he’s been hitting lots of balls. He’s hopefully ready to go. It’s going to be nice to have the captain with us,” he said on Rahul.

    It’s nice to have so much talent in our squad: Langer

    Langer further spoke about KL Rahul’s position in LSG’s playing XI for the upcoming IPL. The 31-year-old batter has usually played as an opener in the white-ball format. However, he has found success while batting down the order, partiularly in the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup where he amassed 452 in 11 matches, averaging 75.33.

    Also read: IPL 2024: David Willey to miss initial matches for LSG due to personal reasons

    “I haven’t been coaching for two years since I left the Australian cricket team, and for two years I’ve been sleeping very well at night. Now, it’s hard to sleep at night because it’s very hard to fit so much talent into 11 positions. It’s a good problem to have. It’s a sweet problem, but we’ll work it out. It’s nice to have so much talent in our squad.

    “My view – and I’ve said this for probably 25 years – (is that) if the team does well, then everyone gets rewarded. And therefore, from KL’s point of view, if he captains the Lucknow Super Giants to an IPL victory, it means he would’ve played well himself and he would’ve captained very well, and he would’ve wicket-kept very well,” he concluded.

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  • Aussies under pump after shock personnel, tactics changes

    Aussies under pump after shock personnel, tactics changes

    Welcome to our live coverage of Australia’s second ODI World Cup game, as the Aussies look to rebound from their drubbing at the hands of India.

    The Aussies will face a stern test with a South African team on fire with the bat, can Pat Cummins’ side get on the board or will their hopes in India be almost dashed already?

    FOLLOW ALL THE ACTION AS IT HAPPENS BELOW

    9:45PM: FIGHTBACK IS ON?

    Who said Australia couldn’t threaten with their spin?

    Well, this blogg, HOWEVER, this time it’s Adam Zampa who strikes, getting the wicket of van der Dussen, who was looking extremely threatening.

    The South African holed out to Sean Abbott at long-on who took a safe catch, no issues with the boundary rope this time.

    The momentum may have just been quelled however, with Cummins putting down the new batsman Markram as Quinton de Kock reaches his century, a superb innings.

    Australia will have to claim him soon if they are going to keep this target down.

    9:00PM: DANGER, WARNING, HAZARD SIGNS FLASHING

    The way it’s looking, the Aussies are going to have to chase a mammoth total in Lucknow to keep themselves above water at this World Cup.

    Quinton de Kock has raced into the 60s, while his partner got another life, surviving another tough chance.

    Bevuma whacked one towards the square leg boundary, with sub fielder Sean Abbott taking the catch on the rope, before his weight took him over.

    In an attempt to throw it back towards a teammate, Abbott missed Mitch Starc and the chance was gone.

    These two have started to pile on the runs, reaching a 100-run stand and setting a brilliant platform for their side to launch off.

    What answers can Pat Cummins and his side find?

    Glenn Maxwell it is !

    Bavuma holes out to David Warner on the rope and Australia have a breakthrough.

    8:35PM: PROTEAS PILE ON PAIN, AS CAREY REPLACEMENT FLUFFS

    A confident South Africa batting unit was always going to be a tough challenge for the Aussies, and it is proving to be that and more to start this game.

    The Aussies were unable to pick up a wicket in the first 10 overs as Quinton de Kock and Temba Bavuma settle nicely into this innings.

    The former especially has looked in fantastic touch, punishing the odd ball from the Aussie quicks.

    These two could be in position to put South Africa in a brilliant spot to build this innings, and it’s danger signs for the Aussies who elected to bowl first.

    Alex Carey will be kicking himself further now, with his replacement putting down an easy chance off Adam Zampa’s first over.

    Zampa slid one past the bat of Bavuma, grabbed the edge put Inglis could not complete the catch.

    7:45PM: CAREY’S QUICK FALL FROM GRACE

    Does it all go back to that stumping at Lord’s? Fox Cricket’s Kerry’O Keefe seems to think so when discussin Alex Carey’s poor form.

    The commentator told the keeper to be “like a goldfish,” referring to thr tv show Ted Lasso and forgetting what has happened in the past.

    Carey captained this ODI team as recently as 2021, and his replacement Josh Inglis may have a chance to press his claims for another one of Carey’s gigs should he play well.

    Australia’s chances of making the final four hinge massively on tonight’s result, so was the Inglis move out of desperation?

    7:00PM: SURPRISE IN STORE FOR CRUCIAL WORLD CUP CLASH

    A week after declaring Alex Carey was Australia’s clear No. 1 with the gloves, Australia’s selectors have lost patience with the wicketkeeper, dropping him for Josh Inglis.

    Coach Andrew McDonald had this to say when asked last Thursday if there was a discussion to be had about Inglis taking over from Carey:

    “I think you saw our intentions are clear with Alex taking the gloves in the final practice game against Pakistan. There’s no doubt Josh is playing an up tempo game the laps and reverse laps,” McDonald said.

    “He’s always been an option for us. And not only in the keeping space, but but in the batting space as well. So we feel as though he might have a role somewhere in the tournament as a batter only and if something were to happen to Alex, then we’ve got a capable backup.

    “But Alex Carey over a period of time has been ultra impressive.”

    But Carey made a second-ball duck against India, continuing a poor run of form.

    The Aussies will bowl first after winning the toss.

    Australia call on secret weapon for crucial World Cup showdown

    Australia was calling on the local knowledge of cricket great Andy Flower as it braces for a vastly different wicket in Lucknow to the one it confronted at Chennai on Sunday.

    Former Zimbabwe captain and England coach Flower has been spending time working with the Aussies on and off in recent months, consulting ahead of the World Test Championship final and during the Ashes.

    He is back with the side for a period during the World Cup, and was on the field in a meeting with captain Pat Cummins, coach Andrew McDonald and selection chair George Bailey, 24 hours out from Australia’s match against South Africa at the Ekana Stadium.

    Flower knows this venue better than most. He coached the Indian Premier League’s Lucknow Super Giants across the past two seasons before being replaced by ex-Australian coach Justin Langer.

    Australia struggled on a slow turner at Chepauk in its six-wicket loss to India on Sunday, but Cummins said on Wednesday that the pitch at Lucknow – which hosts Australia’s next two matches against the Proteas and South Africa – appeared a different proposition.

    “It’s a beautiful stadium. I thought I had been here but I don’t think I have but (it’s a) beautiful ground. The wicket looks really good. I haven’t had a look at it today. But last night looked really good. Really even so maybe a bit of pace and bounce. Yeah, so we’ll see how it is tomorrow,” Cummins said.

    “When it’s a good wicket, which that looks like, most of the games have been 300 plus.”

    While India’s spinners ran through the Aussies on Sunday afternoon, Australia’s tweaker twins Adam Zampa and Glenn Maxwell did not have anywhere near the same success under lights, struggling to control the ball because of dew.

    It called into question Cummins’ decision to bat first on Sunday, but he said the India experience would not necessarily sway the strategy this time around.

    “I think it’s different at every venue. So you know here it’s whatever a few thousand kilometres away from Chennai it’s a bit different,” Cummins said.

    “Probably have another look tonight, see if there’s dew but it doesn’t seem like there’s as much dew at this ground. But yeah, I don’t really have a strong opinion on the dew in one-day cricket. Some games the ball gets heavy and it’s actually better to bowl at night and other games it gets so slippery that it’s hard to grip onto so it’s kind of a bit different to T20.”

    Cummins reiterated that all-rounder Marcus Stoinis, who also plays in the IPL for Lucknow, was available for the match after missing the defeat to India following a hamstring complaint. But Cummins said the Aussies would confirm their XI at the toss.

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  • One Day disaster: Why skipper was powerless to save Australia

    One Day disaster: Why skipper was powerless to save Australia

    How do you react when you’ve just gone for the equal-worst bowling figures in the more than 4600-match history of men’s one-day international cricket?

    With a smile.

    Adam Zampa has always been different, but when cameras panned to him heading up the stairs at SuperSport Park in Centurion after being smacked for 113 from his 10 wicketless overs, equalling the record set by compatriot Mick Lewis against the same opposition some 17 years earlier, he was sharing a lighter moment with stand-in skipper Mitch Marsh, chuckling as though he didn’t have a care in the world.

    Zampa wasn’t alone though. The body language in the Australian camp belied a team that had just been smoked for the third-highest ODI total ever conceded by an Aussie side, the damage inflicted primarily by Heinrich Klaasen with David Miller riding shotgun.

    Marsh, true to his laid-back nature, was grinning, and greeted by coach Andrew McDonald and recuperating captain Pat Cummins outside the dressing rooms, there were pats on the back and grins all round.

    At one level this might be surprising. Often when a team cops such a hiding heads are down and brows are furrowed.

    Yet at another level it should be no shock. Since McDonald replaced Justin Langer, the air of intensity has been taken out of the Australian dressing room. McDonald, Cummins and Marsh are at one in their calmness and there would be no catastrophising despite a couple of hours in which the Proteas made an undermanned Aussie attack look well off the pace.

    So, how concerned should Australia and its fans be after losing an ODI to the world’s fifth-ranked side by 164 runs less than three weeks out from the start of the World Cup?

    That largely depends on how much faith you have in Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Glenn Maxwell, Steve Smith and Cameron Green to fire when they return from their respective injuries in the lead-up to the tournament.

    Australia’s depth held up very well through the early stages of this tour, but across the last couple of games it is clear that the absentees have reached critical mass levels.

    At Centurion, the Aussies again fielded just seven of its 15-man World Cup squad, and it was in the bowling department where the strain was felt most acutely.

    Far from the dream of a side stacked with all-rounders that has underscored preparations for the tournament, Australia went in with a rigid team heavily reliant on plan A coming off.

    It is extraordinary that in the face of the Klaasen onslaught, Marsh only used five bowlers, all of whom had to fulfil their allotment of 10 overs.

    Ever an injury-watch, Marsh has been nursed through this tour after bowling more than expected during the Ashes, meaning the captain was under instructions not to bowl himself. He will resume rolling the arm over come the next preparatory series in India.

    But with Marsh opting not to call on Travis Head, it meant that all five Aussie bowlers had to keep being subjected to punishment no matter how badly they were going.

    Josh Hazlewood, the No. 1-ranked bowler in the format, looked anything but the reliable line- and-length man, finishing with 2-79, the worst figures of his career, surpassing the 0-74 he delivered three days earlier at Potchefstroom.

    And then there was Zampa, who started the day just three spots below Hazlewood on the rankings.

    Before Friday, the leg-spinner had never gone for more than 72 runs in an ODI. In other circumstances he would have been shielded from the unwanted record, pulled after eight or nine overs to avoid the ignominy. Yet there were so few options that he had to send down the 48th over of the innings, going for 26 to catch Lewis. There were some poor balls for sure, too short and wide, but it was also just a brutal display from Klaasen, who finished 174 from 83.

    Yet for all the destruction in the South African innings, it was the damage done by Gerald Coetzee in the run chase likely to have the most lasting implications. A short ball from the Proteas quick fractured Head’s left hand. His involvement in the early stages of the World Cup is up in the air.

    Australian team management announced that Head was due to go for a scan with results not expected until Sunday (Australian time). The injury potentially opens the door for Marnus Labuschagne to be parachuted into the squad after his heroics at the start of this series.

    But you only had to look at the South African acceleration to realise that losing Head’s firepower at the top of the order is more than a tiny setback for Australia’s hopes.

    From the wreckage the Aussies can at least be buoyed that Alex Carey has found touch with the bat for the first time since early in the Ashes, making 99 from 77 in a forlorn chase.

    However, smile as they like, the Australian camp would not have wanted to be so heavily pinning its hopes on a veteran quartet (Maxwell, Starc, Cummins and Smith) all coming back from medium-term injury. This is a bumpy road to the game’s most prestigious tournament.

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  • Why Ponting is surprised by Langer coaching move

    Why Ponting is surprised by Langer coaching move

    Ricky Ponting says he was surprised to see close mate Justin Langer back in coaching so soon after his messy exit from the Australian men’s team role, revealing that he encouraged the former Test opener to take an opportunity in the Indian Premier League.

    Langer was in July announced as the new head coach of the IPL’s Lucknow Super Giants, replacing former Zimbabwe star and England coach Andy Flower.

    While Langer had been linked to several vacancies since resigning as Australian coach early last year, the Lucknow job is the first coaching spot he has taken following the Aussie exit.

    It means Langer will be pitted against Ponting, who coaches the Delhi Capitals in the world’s most lucrative cricket competition.

    Ponting, a long-time teammate and confidante of Langer, said the West Australian had sought the ex-Aussie skipper’s counsel when the Lucknow job became a possibility.

    “I didn’t expect him to be back into coaching as quick as he is,” Ponting told CODE Sports.

    “The opportunity came across his desk when we were in England doing the Ashes together and he said, ‘What do you think?’

    “I said, ‘Mate, if you’re up to it, you’ll love it.’ It’s a great environment to be back in again and the competitive juices that I know he’s had pent up for the last couple of years, you can get them flowing again. And he’s taken over a pretty good squad as well.”

    Lucknow, an expansion IPL franchise, made the finals in 2023 but lost in the eliminator to the Mumbai Indians.

    Captained by Indian veteran KL Rahul, the Super Giants’ squad features Australian all-rounder Marcus Stoinis, a member of the Aussies Twenty20 side that won the World Cup in Langer’s final few months in the job.

    Langer opted not to accept a short-term contract extension from Cricket Australia amid a controversial end to his almost four years as coach, leaving the role amid a degree of player discontent over his behaviour despite winning the World Cup and the Ashes. Langer, who enjoyed success as coach of the Big Bash League’s Perth Scorchers before taking the Aussie job, has since worked as a broadcaster, columnist and sits on the board of the West Coast Eagles.

    Ponting noted that the IPL role was far from limited to the two months of the competition given the league’s growing footprint around the world.

    “Your IPL work never stops. There’s comps going on all around the world, and you’re looking at players and trying to scout and identify players. So that doesn’t stop, but it makes it more exciting,” Ponting said.

    “I love that job, it’s just about my favourite time of the year.”

    Ponting is meanwhile optimistic about the BBL’s Hobart Hurricanes returning to the finals this year after his disappointing first season as the club’s head of strategy.

    Hobart – one of two BBL clubs never to have won the competition – claimed Chris Jordan, Sam Hain and Corey Anderson at last week’s overseas player draft, but Ponting stressed the importance of home grown talent.

    “We’re trying to build a really strong core of domestic players and we’re a bit like what Perth where the overseas slots don’t become as important,” Ponting said.

    “So we’ve got some young talent down there like Caleb Jewell was outstanding last year, we’ve got Mitch Owen as a young Tasmanian all-rounder that will get some opportunity this year. And when you look at (Riley) Meredith, (Billy) Stanlake, (Nathan) Ellis, (Paddy) Dooley, (Peter) Hatzoglou, if we can keep that sort of group of bowlers together then it’s pretty good squad.

    “Last year was a disappointing season, with the squad that we had, missing the playoffs by that one game. So hopefully we can go a step further this year and qualify because it’s about time, we have to win something, simple as that. So now one of the reasons I took this job was to try and bring some success to the Hobart Hurricanes, so hopefully it’s this year.”

    Ponting’s media commitments will again preclude him from spending much time around the Hurricanes during the season.

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  • Where Boomers f-bomb rant ranks in all-time Aussie sprays

    Where Boomers f-bomb rant ranks in all-time Aussie sprays

    Brian Goorjian tore shreds off his Boomers side in their World Cup loss to Germany, but at least he didn’t grab an axe. ROBERT CRADDOCK ranks Australian sports all time sprays.

    Paint started peeling off walls, eyebrows narrowed and, for a few startling seconds, the sports world was frog marched back to a more rough and ready era.

    The Magic Spray was back, perhaps for one night only, but it was quite the show.

    Watching emotional Boomers coach Brian Goorjian unleash his inner Rottweiller with a withering spray at the Australian Boomers basketball team was to revisit colourful eras when this tactic was the norm and not the godforsaken f—ing exception (for crying out loud).

    “Swallow the f—ing ball. Come on now. Boys, we got to pick this up. It’s embarrassing.” Goorjian said.

    “I don’t know what is going on, man. “F**k, we’re playing for our lives. Two dead bodies.”

    And these were the kind bits.

    Unfortunately the super spray did not save the game – Australia lost to Germany 85-82 in the World Cup game – but the spicy smelling salts did wake Australia from an early slumber.

    “I just thought we had two or three guys on the floor asleep.,” Goorjian said afterwards.

    “I just needed that time out to use my voice. That’s really the only time I go off. It’s very rare.’’

    It terms of volcanic sledges this one might not rate in the same league as Tommy Raudonikis smashing the windows of the Wests change room with an axe or Rodney Eade’s famous outbursts at the Sydney Swans.

    Or even “Angry Eddie’’ Jones headphone-slamming performances during the five successive losses the Wallabies have suffered in his tenure this year.

    One coach who would have no problems with it would have been soccer superstar Dwight Yorke who, in his farewell address, described the Macarthur A-League side he coached as a “pub team” and became so animated that club officials had to to calm him down.

    Somewhere in retirement, AFL coach Malcolm Blight might reckon the basketball serve had wet lettuce impact compared to the day in 1997 he called Crows David Pittman “the most pathetic ruckman I’ve seen in my entire life in footy.”

    But Goorjian’s outburst did raise the question of whether the old fashion super spray – captivating television I must say – is still worth the occasional try.

    Some sports such as cricket don’t believe so. One of the reasons why Andrew McDonald replaced Justin Langer as Australian cricket coach is that his lid doesn’t bubble on the top of the saucepan in the way Langer’s did on occasions.

    Some seasoned mentors feel the spray works if used selectively – and at the right time.

    Experienced sports psychologist Phil Jauncey told this masthead one of the things master coaches Wayne Bennett and Leigh Matthews gave him most thanks for was reminding them to never spray their players while feeling highly emotional.

    Both Matthews and Bennett were raised in eras when sprays were commonplace then had to adjust to more sensitive times.

    “It’s a difficult world,’’ Jauncey said.

    “These players come through and they might get a ribbon for finishing a race in primary school even if they ran last and criticism has not been promoted in their world.’’

    Bennett may have pointed his old club the Broncos to glory by ringing his long time protégé and Broncos coach Kevin Walters after watching him give a high voltage, jersey waving dressing room slapdown to his players two years ago.

    “Be careful … that’s not you … just be yourself,’’ was Bennett’s warning.

    Some of Bennett’s most successful threats to his players were more clever than caustic.

    Like the time in Canberra when his Broncos team were trailing at halftime and he said “I thought you were all planning a night out after this game … well it won’t be happening if you lose.’’

    They rallied and won, proving some of the best sledges of all are the ones which threaten not a man’s very dignity but his desperate craving for a quiet beer.

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  • Leaked Australia-India plans defy cricket’s hopes for change

    Leaked Australia-India plans defy cricket’s hopes for change

    Days after cricket’s most revered think tank pushed the ICC to crack down on the amount of cricket being played, leaked documents have revealed how difficult that could be, writes DANIEL CHERNY.

    Australia is tentatively scheduled to play India in a one-day international series just days after the 2027 World Cup, flying in the face of an MCC plan to radically cull the amount of men’s ODI cricket played outside major tournaments.

    The MCC’s world cricket committee – which features the likes of Justin Langer, Mike Gatting, Kumar Sangakkara, Graeme Smith, Sourav Ganguly and Eoin Morgan – met at Lord’s before the recent second Test, and has since released recommendations to help international cricket deal with its state of flux, a situation amplified by the acceleration of the white-ball circuit.

    Among the committee’s proposals was that bilateral men’s ODI series should be culled outside the 12-month window leading into a World Cup in order to reduce the amount of meaningless ODIs and free space on the calendar.

    The MCC plan is for the scheme to come into effect from after the 2027 World Cup, due to fall in October and November of that year in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia.

    The ICC’s current future tours program – outlining every bilateral series between Test-playing nations – only stretches to April 2027, although ICC events including World Cups and the Champions Trophy have also been earmarked until 2031.

    However boards also have projected bilateral series dates beyond April 2027. The memorandum of understanding signed between Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketers’ Association earlier this year includes details of series stretching into early 2028.

    Among them is a three-match ODI series between India and Australia in the subcontinent, pencilled in for November 2027, the same month the ODI World Cup finishes.

    The Aussies are then scheduled to play five Twenty20 internationals in India before heading home for three Tests against Sri Lanka, two Tests at home against South Africa before three home ODIs and three home T20Is against the Proteas in February 2028.

    Australia is then scheduled to return to Pakistan for a three-match Test series.

    The MCC world cricket committee holds no binding powers in the sport, with its role merely advisory, albeit featuring some of the game’s greats.

    CA chief Nick Hockley said last month that he saw a future for all three formats.

    “I’m very much of the view that overall, having a range of different propositions is complimentary rather than competing. Everything‘s a balance and we’ve got to find ways that the different formats exist,” Hockley said.

    This year’s men’s ODI World Cup will be held in India in October and November. Australia is scheduled to play three lead-up ODIs against the hosts before five T20 internationals after the tournament. Australia’s next ODIs following the World Cup are at home to the West Indies in February.

    Outgoing world cricket committee chair Gatting, the ex-England captain, said action had to be taken.

    “It’s time for the global game to reset,” Gatting said.

    “Too often, member nations are finding themselves living hand to mouth with their cricketing operations, versus having a long-term, viable strategy in place that future-proofs the game in their country, both financially and in terms of participation.

    “We are currently at the commencement of a new ICC FTP and financing cycle, and we would recommend further evidence of the requisite funding being directly apportioned to the strategic needs of cricket.

    “The actions that were raised at the recent meeting highlight the importance for the ICC to proactively engage the global game to find solutions that work for everyone. A more equitable approach would, in turn, provide more commercial stability and continue to grow the potential of the ICC World Test Championship.”

    The ICC has in recent days held its own annual conference in Durban, announcing equal prize money for men’s and women’s teams at ICC events.

    Daniel ChernyStaff writer

    Daniel Cherny is a Melbourne sportswriter, focusing on AFL and cricket. Having started his career at Back Page Lead, Daniel spent eight years at The Age, during which time he covered Australian Test cricket tours of Bangladesh and the UAE, as well as the 2016 Rio Olympics. He has been recognised for both his AFL and cricket writing, including winning the Clinton Grybas Rising Star Award at the 2019 Australian Football Media Association Awards. He is also a compulsive Simpsons quoter.

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  • Atherton: Aussie cracks starting to open as Ashes changes loom

    Atherton: Aussie cracks starting to open as Ashes changes loom

    At least one change is looming for Australia in the fourth Ashes Test amid a raft of selection headaches, while England has a difficult situation of its own, writes MIKE ATHERTON.

    “So we beat on … borne back ceaselessly into the past.” With apologies to F. Scott Fitzgerald, there are historical echoes everywhere in this series. Four years ago, after Ben Stokes inspired a thrilling comeback in the third Test at Headingley, England and Australia contemplated a nine-day break before the start of the fourth Test at Old Trafford, just like now.

    After three absorbing games – themselves resonant of the three central games of the 2005 series, with tight margins placing a premium on every session – the players (and supporters and, dare it be said, journalists) will welcome a chance to recharge the batteries. Modern schedules rarely allow for anticipation, but this break bucks the trend and Old Trafford will be better for it.

    Justin Langer, Australia’s coach in 2019, described that hiatus as the most challenging but ultimately rewarding of his post-playing career as he tried to engineer a response from his players. His successor, Andrew McDonald, has a similar task now to lift his team after a galling defeat.

    The day after the defeat at Headingley four years ago, Langer made the decision to cancel leave for those not involved in the county game at Derbyshire. He wanted his entire squad to stay together, an unpopular move for those who were planning a few days in London. Equally unpopular was the decision to force the players to watch the last hour of that game again. Peter Siddle and Nathan Lyon kicked up a fuss, but watched nonetheless.

    Langer recalled that the strength of feeling could be seen in the pre-match warm-up before the Derbyshire game, where his players flew into each other during their knockabout game of Aussie rules. There is no county game in this particular interlude and Australia’s players will stick to their planned break before reconnecting next weekend in Manchester.

    Given the intensity of the cricket, optional time away sounds a very sensible decision. Five-day cricket is a challenge for body and mind – the former for bowlers, the latter for batsmen – and Australia have effectively played four consecutive Tests now owing to their World Test Championship final against India. The European mainland is on the radar for some; Scotland and the Cotswolds for others. Those wanting culture have opted for Manchester (obviously).

    McDonald has some thinking to do in that time because some cracks have started to open. David Warner’s travails against Stuart Broad are obvious: Broad has now dismissed him 17 times in all, and a further three times for low scores in this series. Warner has looked in decent touch in the main, but there were signs at Headingley that he had begun to tinker with his set-up and technique, much as he had in 2019 when things got worse as the series progressed.

    What should they do? Warner’s form is a concern, but his possible replacements, Marcus Harris and Matt Renshaw, have had little cricket. Neither is exceptional in the field, whereas Warner’s slip catching has been of its usual high standard; given the quality of Australia’s fast bowling, good slip fielding remains an underappreciated asset. Warner’s body language remains strong and he looks up for the contest. They should stick with him.

    Scott Boland is another concern, having taken only two wickets in two Tests and leaking runs at a rate. Boland’s strength is his ability to bowl long economical spells but England have refused to allow that to happen, batting proactively against him by using their feet and disrupting his length. His economy rate thus far is 4.91. Josh Hazlewood will return in place of him.

    But none of Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins or Hazlewood are workhorses, which brings into focus the two other worrying strands for Australia: Todd Murphy and Cameron Green. Lyon’s ability to bowl in all conditions, from days one to five, allowed Australia the luxury of playing three main seamers and Green as an all-rounder, even with a limit on the workload.

    Judging from the way Cummins was reluctant to use Murphy on the decisive fourth day – the off spinner bowled only two overs – they no longer have that luxury.

    With Lyon relied on to bowl no matter the conditions, Australia did not have to worry about the balance of their side, the presence of an all-rounder being a bonus. England, too, have that problem now that Stokes’s body has effectively made him a batting captain in all but extreme or emergency situations. That was why England wanted to play five frontline bowlers in Leeds and why Chris Woakes had to play because of his batting.

    It is likely that England will seek the same balance at Old Trafford, with four frontline seamers, plus Moeen Ali. Mark Wood and Stuart Broad are certainties on form; Woakes plays for his all-round ability, which leaves one seamer from Josh Tongue, Ollie Robinson and James Anderson. Suddenly, Anderson’s position looks uncertain, although his knowledge of home conditions gives him the edge.

    But it still leaves the problem of No 3, because Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jonny Bairstow and Stokes are all more comfortable at Nos 4, 5 and 6. The experiment with Ali was all about protecting Brook at No 5, but Stokes intimated after the match that it is unlikely to be continued. It is still hard to see past the logic of Root at No 3, as the best player in the team and the one likeliest to act as a buffer for those below.

    That balance of the team also impacts upon the wicketkeeping debate. To play five bowlers, the wicketkeeper has to bat in the top six. Readers of The Times have been (by and large) fulminating about Bairstow’s wicketkeeping and about the continued omission of Ben Foakes. It is true that Bairstow has looked rusty and not the ‘keeper of five years ago when he was doing the job full time.

    It is a very tricky debate, though, and unless they go with Root as a solitary spinner (risky at Old Trafford), the wicketkeeper will have to bat in the top six, which plays to Bairstow’s advantage. The squad will be picked towards the end of the week and then, with apologies to the great writer again, will get a chance to reconnect in Manchester with “the pursued, the pursuing, the busy and the tired”. Thankfully, maybe a little less tired by next Wednesday.

    – The Times

    Originally published as Mike Atherton: Aussie cracks starting to open as changes loom for fourth Ashes Test

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