Thursday, 14 March 2013

Geoffrey Boycott

              Former England batsman Geoffrey Boycott on Thursday criticised Australian coach Mickey Arthur for treating the players like "school children" and said he finds the idea of setting the cricketers written tasks as "childlike It's like being schoolchildren and giving them something to do and if they don't do it, then just slapping them. If you feel that there is an area where they should improve, surely it is up to the coaching staff and the major coach himself, Arthur, to talk to them in private," he said.I always thought that's what a coach's job was. I don't like the coach-manager - you're like a teacher," Boycott told ESPN Cricinfo.The 72-year-old former cricketer said as a coach, he would have tried to help the players with a friendly chat rather than asking them to prepare presentations.Clarke has to run his own team, that's what captains do when they're in charge. But it wouldn't be the way I would run it, put it that way. I've played under a lot of good captains. Michael Vaughan was a good captain, Brian Close, Mike Brearley, Ray Illingworth - the great thing they all had in common was to treat people like adults," Boycott said.In the end, you've just got to be sensible and professional. Some guys like to go out and switch off by having a few beers. Everybody is different. As long as you get some sleep, and you're ready to play. I'm sorry, anything else is very childish and it wouldn't be the way I would do it," he added.
            Boycott said if the decision was taken because of a series of such incidents as mentioned by Clarke then those issues should have been sorted out earlier.Clarke had said that it was building up for some time. Now that would worry me, because that says to me there's been other things going on. It's not just setting them a task, to fill in a form and say where they can improve their batting and bowling, that there are other things that are going on. If there have been other things, then it should have been nipped in the bud before it got to the point where this is the last straw he added.I would never play around with their technique or anything, but I would talk to them, I would watch them, and I would give them a bit of advice as to where they might improve. I would think that was my job he said.And if I needed to talk to them about the mental attitude to batting and bowling, that again is my job through my experience and my maturity. But I don't think I should be setting them paper exams to ask them to write down what they think he said. Australia had sacked four players, including vice-captain Shane Watson, for the Third Test against India after the cricketers failed to prepare a three-point presentation on how they could improve the team's performance following their defeats in Chennai and Hyderabad in the first two Tests.

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