Fighting the forces of ineptitude

Fighting the forces of ineptitude

Bob Woolmer’s task with Pakistan

Fighting the forces of ineptitude

Commentary by Kamran Abbasi

August 17, 2004

If you ever wondered about the wisdom of Pakistan’s selectors, then here’s an insight. On the eve of this year’s second Test between Pakistan and India Test I flew from Karachi to Lahore with Saad Shafqat, Javed Miandad’s co-writer. Wasim Bari, chairman of selectors, was on the same flight. He was a man under pressure.

Pakistan had lost badly at Multan and there was an ongoing spat about who selected the final playing XI. As we made our way out of Lahore’s new airport Bari saw us and, unprompted, made it clear that final selection was nothing to do with him. His business was selecting the squad for the Test, and the rest was up to the team management. Wind forward to the end of the first day, and Umar Gul has bowled a matchwinning spell. As Shafqat and I leave the ground we spot Bari again. Shafqat cheekily congratulates him on the selection of Gul.

“Yes, it’s incredible,” says Bari. “When I saw the teamsheet I realised that we were a bowler short, and I rushed to the team management and insisted they include Umar Gul.”

Now this may be exactly what happened, although it struck us that Bari was quick to distance himself from defeat but in a rush to associate himself with success. This, unfortunately, has been the state of Pakistan cricket administration for many years. It is human nature to a certain degree, but it is hard to recall a recent example when someone senior in Pakistan cricket accepted responsibility for failure — and there have been many to be accountable for.

Bob Woolmer has to find a way of flourishing in this environment. It may be harder for him now that Rameez Raja has gone. Rameez recognised the value that a quality foreign coach like Woolmer could add to the Pakistani system. He could have helped protect Woolmer in a system where it is every man for himself and the foreigner is the obvious scapegoat. Rameez’s resignation is unfortunate timing for Woolmer, but Rameez’s conflicts of interest had made his position untenable, with his little-mentioned employment with Allied Bank emerging as the more personally damaging.

Woolmer’s challenge will be getting a free hand to implement change in the way that he wants. The goodwill that accompanies a new appointment can evaporate quickly. The challenge for Pakistan’s administrators is to allow Woolmer a free hand. It is essential that a new coach is allowed to pursue the strategy of his choice, and be held to account if that strategy fails. Selection is perhaps the most important area, and this is where Wasim Bari and company must serve the country and not themselves.

Woolmer has already had to intervene to bring Shoaib Akhtar back into the fold after Pakistan’s administrators had taken against him. And while much of the selection for the upcoming tours is reasonable, the omission of Azhar Mahmood, a proven performer in the conditions that Pakistan are likely to encounter in Holland and England, has non-cricketing reasons. Mahmood’s recent interview for this website displeased the PCB. This reflects poorly on Shaharyar Khan, the chairman of the board, who was appointed for his wisdom. Selection should be based on merit, not on vindictiveness.

A further hurdle for Woolmer is the Pakistani press corps. He encountered extraordinary criticism after one bad defeat in the Asia Cup, although it is hard to know how any reasonable commentator can pass judgment on Woolmer on the basis of one tournament. Woolmer has set about defending himself on his own website, dissecting the criticism and offering some criticism of his own. It is refreshing that a Pakistani cricket official — which Woolmer may not behave like, but definitely now is — is prepared to be accessible and debate openly in this manner.

For my money, the Asia Cup was a reasonable start for Woolmer’s Pakistan. The tournaments in Holland and England offer further opportunities for him to learn about his players, and refine his strategy. The real tests will begin later this year, with Sri Lanka’s visit followed by the tour of Australia.

Pakistan has a fine crop of young players and a proven international coach to bring the best out of them. Yet the forces of ineptitude — the PCB, the selectors, and the media — are already causing concern. Woolmer’s reign is a test of the maturity of Pakistan’s administrators and media as much as it is a test of the players and his coaching. Pakistan cricket has the best opportunity it has had since at least the 1999 World Cup, and possibly even the 1992 World Cup, to move up to the next level in world cricket. One tournament down the road, and the forces of ineptitude have failed more than Woolmer has.

Kamran Abbasi is a London-based cricket writer and acting editor of the British Medical Journal.

Re: Fighting the forces of ineptitude

:hehe: This is funny.

Kamran is spot on when he says that it is a sorry state that everyone associates himself to the success while no one wants to admit responsibility for failure.

This is even better. Read Woolmer’s demolition job on the disgraceful article published by Reha Siddiqui in Dawn newspaper. Woolmer’s comments are bolded:

THE DAWN IS BREAKING AGAIN

05 Aug 2004
Asia Cup exposes Pakistan team’s frailties

By Rehan Siddiqui

Pakistan finished top from the bottom in the “three-team” Asia Cup, yet the entire Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) management including chairman, chief executive, coach, manager and captain has gone overboard claiming the campaign as an outstanding success and predict the team to be on the verge of accomplishing greater deeds in coming months.

**I presume he means third? EUPHORIA Sorry I do not see us in a euphoric state! It was the first OPPORTUNITY TO SEE HOW THE TEAM WORK AND TO SEE THE TEAM in action.
THE TOUR WAS A SUCCESS IN THAT we certainly managed to put in some decent team structures during the Asia cup none of which the author was privy too or indeed wanted to be privy to. He never came to one practice and watched all our games from the inner sanctum of HIS room AT the Hotel. **

Such euphoria coming from the PCB officials is nothing new taking into consideration the past experience. The very same sentiments have been expressed for the past four years with not one major victory to date to the credit of the team to shout about.

To describe the trip to the pearl island a success is another crude attempt by the PCB officials to hide management’s inability to put the house in order and overcome the team’s frailties which were so visible in Colombo.

THIS IS HIS OPINION NOT THAT OF THE MANAGEMENT! I FIRMLY BELIEVE THAT THE TRIP WAS NOT A DISASTER AND THAT WE MADE GOOD PROGRESS!

The fact of the matter is that the present team, despite spending huge sums of money in acquisition of dozens of foreign experts, has not what it takes to become a real threat to the dominance of Australia, the undisputed kings of world cricket.

ANYONE WHO UNDERSTANDS CRICKET WILL UNDERSTAND THAT IT WILL TAKE TIME TO BRING A TEAM UP TO THE SAME STANDARD AS AUSTRALIA HAVE ACHIEVED. INDEED IT TOOK AUSTRALIA 10 YEARS!

Pakistan’s problems after the end of the “golden era” of Imran Khan have been inconsistency, brittleness in batting and perennial shortcomings in ground fielding and catching. The performance in two significant outings, India and Sri Lanka, not for the umpteenth time highlighted these frailties.

IF IF IF ONLY - BRINGING BACK THE PAST IS NOT MY EXPERTISE ANY WAY IF THERE IS ONLY A PAST THERE WOULD NEVER BE A FUTURE.

The squad named to defend the Asia Cup by Wasim Bari and his co-selectors was the best available and the blame of failure lies with the players and the team management as they failed to rise to the occasion.

THANKS A LOT WE LOST ONE GAME AND FAILED TO RISE TO THE OCCASION

While the defeat against Sri Lanka was a bitter pill to swallow the loss of bonus point, so important against India, was lack of planning on part of the high-profile coach.

IN WHAT WAY DID WE LACK PLANNING MAY I PLEASE HAVE AN EXAMPLE!

One swallow does not make a summer. This has been exactly the case with the Pakistan team. The PCB management is crowing over the win against India but very conveniently forgot the humiliation against Sri Lanka earlier.

I QUITE AGREE ONE SWALLOW DOESN’T MAKE A SUMMER, CAN YOU PLEASE LET ME KNOW HOW WE CONVENIENTLY FORGOT ABOUT SRI LANKA? THE WIN AGAINST INDIA WAS AN EXCELLENT COMEBACK FOLLOWING THE DEFEAT. A LOT OF JOURNALISTS SAID THAT WE COULD NOT RECOVER FROM THAT DEFEAT.

It appeared that Pakistan team management’s sole priority after the Sri Lankan debacle was to avoid defeat at all cost against India and winning the trophy became secondary.

I HAVE HEARD SOME RUBBISH IN MY LIFE BUT THIS TAKES THE BONUS POINT!

As things stands today the chances of Pakistan challenging Australia in the too distant future is not on the horizon unless we produce bowlers of the calibre of great Ws Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Imran Khan and the batsmen of the standing of Javed Miandad, Salim Malik and Saeed Anwar.

THIS STATEMENT MERELY SHOWS HOW FAR OUT OF TOUCH THE AUTHOR OF THIS ARTICLE IS! WE WILL NEVER BRING BACK THE PAST TIME WAITS FOR NO MAN.

With due respect Yousuf Youhana, Younis Khan, Shoaib Malik and Imran Farhat are not in the same class of above named trio while Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Sami cannot be compared with the truly world greats Ws who delivered on the field rather than blowing their own trumpets off the field.

The coming months are going to be really testing for Pakistan cricket and only the time will tell whether the present available talent has the capability to rise to the occasion and be counted on world cricket map or go down the same road as the once invincible and mighty West Indies, the new whipping boys.

AT LAST WE ARE IN AGREEMENT THE NEXT FEW MONTHS WILL BE TESTING FOR PAKISTAN CRICKET AND THIS IS WHEN WE ALL HAVE TO STAND UP AND BE COUNTED! INDEED WE WILL HAVE TO LEARN QUICKLY IF WE ARE TO ACHIEVE THE GOALS WE HAVE SET EACH OTHER. WE HAVE TO DO THIS WITH THE PLAYERS WE HAVE AND THE STAFF WE HAVE!

Perhaps the time is right now for PCB to also engage foreign chairman and chief executive to turn things around as the present as well as past top officials not only plunged Pakistan cricket into one crisis after another but also brought country’s good name into disrepute due to on and off field activities of the players and officials.

**CLEARLY THE AUTHOR COULD DO A BETTER JOB OR COULD HE? WHERE ARE HIS SUGGESTIONS OF HOW WE CAN IMPROVE? WHERE ARE HIS SUGGESTIONS ON HOW WE CAN BEAT THE AUSTRALIANS? CRITICISM IS THE EASY WAY OUT!
AND THE AUTHOR IS OK AT CRITICISM. REMEMBER HE SAID TO ME “I WRITE WHAT I SEE”. MY CHALLENGE IS TO COME OUT AND HAVE A LOOK!

I CAN ONLY GUESS THAT HIS TEAM WOULD BE: -

  1. HANIF MOHAMMED
  2. SAEED ANWAR
  3. JAVED MIANDAD
  4. MAJID KHAN
  5. ZAHEER ABBAS
  6. INZAMAM UL HAQ
  7. IMRAN KHAN
  8. WASIM BARI
  9. WASIM AKRAM
  10. WAQAR YOUNIS
  11. ABDUL QUADIR**

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Do these chimps actually get paid to write these articles? Sack this moron NOW.