Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Waqar Younis given second term as Pakistan coachESPNcricinfo staff
May 6, 2014
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Former Pakistan fast bowler Waqar Younis has been appointed national coach for a period of two years. He will join the team in June, having previously served as bowling coach of the Pakistan side in 2006-07 and as head coach in 2010-11.
“I am extremely pleased to have been selected as the head coach,” Waqar said. “My immediate aim would be to prepare the team for the upcoming busy cricket season including the next year’s ICC Cricket World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.”
After Dav Whatmore’s contract with Pakistan ended in February, former wicketkeeper Moin Khan, who had been the team’s manager, was named coach and was in charge of the team until the World Twenty20 in April, when the same PCB administration under Najam Sethi that had appointed him coach, gave him the dual roles of team manager and chief selector of the national team.

Pakistan Cricket News: Waqar Younis given second term as Pakistan coach | ESPN Cricinfo

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

great choice…waqar can play bad cop roe well…and ofcourse he always lists our fast bowling standard…

Blogs: Hassan Cheema: The Waqar Younis silver lining | Cricket Blogs | ESPN Cricinfo

May 6, 2014 The Waqar silver lining Hassan Cheema | |

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Waqar Younis: the one who can pull Pakistan back up on to their feet © AFP

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Seemingly unbeknownst to the rest of the world, and even the casual fan in Pakistan, the cricket in the country has gone through quite the clusterfuffle over the past month. The T20 captain resigned before he was pushed; the coach of that team has been rewarded for his failure by landing two higher posts; the musical chairs in the PCB has resulted in Basit Ali and Mohammad Akram becoming the guardians of the future of Pakistan cricket (which is probably the least disagreeable part of this reorganisation); and there is the latest edition of the “Let’s change the domestic structure before people get used to it” game.
Once the dust had settled somewhat, the head of the six-member selection committee (which is a slightly odd notion in Pakistan in the first place) said to the media that the position of the captain who had led his team to four bilateral series win in five needs to be reconsidered because, in his words, “the captain should be liked in the media and by the people as well”. This was followed only hours later by the head of the PCB saying that there would be no change in captaincy. Meanwhile the TV network that had once employed (or still employs) these two disagreeing gentlemen found the time to have a two-hour Misbah bash-athon in between these two statements. So fond are Pakistanis of the “cornered tiger formula” that the board seems to be actively trying to make sure that the team starts by being pinned back in a corner.

I’ll postpone a rant over this shambles to another day, because the silver lining to this cloud may have the most significant impact on the Pakistan team in the short-to-medium run: it seems increasingly likely that Waqar Younis will be appointed the head coach of the Pakistan team.
Like everything else in Pakistan, Waqar splits opinion - he was either the most destructive bowler in the country’s history, or someone who had an extraordinary peak but an ordinary plateau. As a captain he was often considered far too conservative, considering the resources he had and the badge he was representing. That conservatism has been present in his coaching stints too, in addition to his belief that the coach has to have more power than he has traditionally been given in Pakistan.
But the stats speak for themselves. Over the past six months, with Junaid Khan going off the boil, and injuries to Mohammad Irfan, questions have been raised about the strength of Pakistani pace bowling. This is a problem Waqar has experience of solving. From 2003 to 2006, Pakistan’s fast bowlers averaged 34.8 in Tests and 32.5 (at econ 4.9) in ODIs, despite the best efforts of Shoaib Akhtar. In March of 2006, Waqar was appointed the bowling coach, and under him those numbers fell to 32.3 and 28.8 (at econ 4.6), despite Shoaib not playing a single Test under him.
Over the next three years, the performances of Pakistani pacers fell yet again, though they spent most of 2008 bowling to substandard batting line-ups. Over those three years Pakistani pacers averaged 37.1 in Tests and 30.2 (at 5.1) in ODIs. Enter Waqar, a second time. In the 22 months that followed, the Test average dropped to 30.5, and although the ODI average went up to 34.1, that had a lot to do with the disastrous tour to Australia and the fact that his best two pacers were banned for most of his tenure.
All that makes him the ideal candidate for the Pakistan bowling coach’s job - one he should be given for life if he were inclined that way and the PCB had any sense (both unlikely scenarios admittedly).
His bowling expertise alone would be enough to support his ascendancy to the head coach’s position, but in addition to that, he did a damn fine job as head coach in his previous stint. Again, some would disagree with his methodology or thinking, particularly if they are fans of a certain captain Waqar often clashed with during that time. But again the stats, and the context, speak in his favour. He took over as head coach after Pakistan had finished a tour to Australia having lost all their matches, under a captain who had been placed there thanks to a mutiny, and a coach who called the players “mentally retarded”. Unfortunately Pakistan didn’t have a Kevin Pietersen to put all their blame on, so they had to rely on Waqar to bring them out of the abyss. And of course he did. Pakistan recovered enough to have decent showings in the World T20 and on the six-Test tour to England, where they competed despite not having a single batsman in any semblance of form, and after the new captain had abandoned ship only one Test into that mega tour. What followed was Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Amir and Zulqarnain Haider doing what made them famous, and Pakistan were back in the abyss. Twelve months after the Zulqarnain episode, Waqar did resign, having made Pakistan into a rather good Test side, and a pretty decent ODI outfit. As one Pakistani player so nearly put it, twice Waqar had encountered a team on its knees, and both times he had grabbed it by the collar and brought it back up to its feet.
And it’s not even as if this a Moyes-to-Manchester United type situation, where an impressive CV is destroyed by the situation the coach is walking into. Pakistan have lacked the bad cop over the last two years. Misbah and Dav Whatmore were more inclined toward being the good cop, which isn’t the sort of thing that brings you success in isolation when it comes to Pakistanis. By all accounts Waqar is someone who is not only suited for the role of bad cop but in fact relishes it. Pakistani cricket is defined by the supposed carefree attitude it often has when on the field, but throughout its greatest years it has relied upon the young stars being deathly afraid of their leader - whether that be Abdul Kardar, Imran Khan, whoever. There’s a reason why when Waqar confronted Amir after that no-ball, Amir froze, unable to respond, unable to defend himself to someone he respected and feared. (Of course, that situation was then “handled” by Salman Butt, who tried to assuage Waqar’s suspicions.)
Thus when reunited with Misbah (or whoever Moin Khan decides to replace Misbah with), Waqar will be ideally suited to the most difficult role in the Pakistan dressing room. This may sound like the ramblings of a fan boy, but the truth is that his work in his two stints has shown he has earned the right to fail. Two decades on from sowing the seeds that meant his generation could never fulfill their potential, Waqar is ideally suited to make sure that history doesn’t repeat itself.

          	   Hassan Cheema is a sports journalist, writer and commentator, and co-hosts the online cricket show *Pace is Pace Yaar*. He tweets [here](http://www.twitter.com/mediagag)
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Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Yes Waqar is a great choice. We need a tough coach like him. he's proved his strong character especially during the days of spot fixing.

Having said that, i still wonder, why the hell he didnt take a power play during 2011 semifinal v/s India???!!! A match that still hurts.. sigh

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Then why he was removed

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Dont remind me of that match JUST DONT

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

no he wasnt removed. he left on his own for personal reasons.

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Yeah but who knows

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

afridi ki shamat :rotato:

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

No Personal grudges against him

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

^ hope so

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

and in another news Ilyas is back as Chief Selector :smack:

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

Welcome Imran back to the team

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

One other reason he'll be good for team is 2015 WC to be played in Australia. And who knows Aus better than Waqar, Ofcourse we have to hope that no other changes are done before WC as PCB is just another political circus like other institutions in pak.

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

I hope this time he can manage his personal differences better, as well as the team.

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

:smiley:
Interviews : Pakistan news | No problem working with Afridi - Waqar | Cricket videos, MP3, podcasts, cricket audio | ESPN Cricinfo

Re: Pakistan teams new coach appointed.

KARACHI: Former Test Cricketer Mohsin Hassan Khan strongly criticized Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) over the selection of Head Coach of the national cricket team, ARY News reported.

Addressing a press conference in Karachi on Thursday, Mohsin Hassan Khan said the appointment of head coach was fixed and PCB had made people as well as candidates fool.

He said some bad names hurting the image of Pakistan cricket and these kind of people should be stopped working.

Former Chief Selector said he is stilling having an option to change PCB’s appointment in court.

Mohsin Hassan Khan expressed concerns over giving team officials two year contract while Chairman PCB’s tenure will last in four months.

PCB made the candidates fool in head coach’s appointment: Mohsin | ARYNEWS.tv, Pakistan News-Latest,Breaking News,Live Videos