The Large One
Who's Next?
[tweet]520131088229076992[/tweet]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cr...o-parody-Kevin-Pietersen-Twitter-account.html
Senior players clearly lied about this. I don't think Alec Stewart would be in the business of defending KP for any other agenda.
And why didn't the ECB take action?
And you are being spectacularly one-eyed about the whole affair. Your chosen time period of 2009-Jan 2014 includes some of the biggest successes and best performances English cricket has ever known.
We don't know the detail of what went on in the dressing room but it was bound to be an extremely challenging environment with the established players dominating the scene.
Broad seems to be generally a massive knob. Highly aggressive and selfish. Very good at winning cricket matches.
Anderson & Prior similarly high achieving and demanding individuals.
Swann - a bit different. Apparently "nicer" but with a sharp tongue and no doubt when number one bowler in the world a decent sized ego.
KP - without question, by far the biggest **** of the lot. Tolerated while winning matches consistently. Jettisoned when focus and performances started to wane.
I don't see a massive problem.
This is as close to complete nonsense as it is possible to get. The Team England set-up can be accused of lots of things but paying insufficient attention to the "non-cricket" aspects is not a charge that fits the evidence.The problem is that the ECB have acted mendaciously. They've treated Pietersen abysmally and continually acted with double standards. And all this after they made Pietersen go though the utterly humilating reintegration process. I don't trust the institution as it stands to get it right with the future management of players. They have a yes man as coach and a yes man as captain, there is no vehicle in my eyes for voicing dissent. How can that be good for the future of English cricket?
I maintain that the team that went to No.1 actually underachieved. As a unit it's probably the best England have ever had.
[tweet]520131088229076992[/tweet]
You are completely missing the point. Pietersen is saying that particular players who were not part of the cabal were singled out for treatment. Pietersen himself was not a victim (as I expect the cabal of senior players considered him too important to the team.)
This was not with the intention of improving performance, it was with the intention of maintaining the positions of the senior players in the team.
Shahzad, Tremlett and Trott have all to an extent backed Pietersen here.
And you are being spectacularly one-eyed about the whole affair. Your chosen time period of 2009-Jan 2014 includes some of the biggest successes and best performances English cricket has ever known.
We don't know the detail of what went on in the dressing room but it was bound to be an extremely challenging environment with the established players dominating the scene.
Broad seems to be generally a massive knob. Highly aggressive and selfish. Very good at winning cricket matches.
Anderson & Prior similarly high achieving and demanding individuals.
Swann - a bit different. Apparently "nicer" but with a sharp tongue and no doubt when number one bowler in the world a decent sized ego.
KP - without question, by far the biggest **** of the lot. Tolerated while winning matches consistently. Jettisoned when focus and performances started to wane.
I don't see a massive problem.
I don't see a massive problem.
This is as close to complete nonsense as it is possible to get. The Team England set-up can be accused of lots of things but paying insufficient attention to the "non-cricket" aspects is not a charge that fits the evidence.
Of course they have not, as an organisation or as individuals, achieved perfection. Who ever does that? They have, however, got a huge amount right and continue to do so.
To say that the team which became the most successful England side in the modern era "underachieved" is laughable and just underlines the extent to which the management and players involved "cannot win".
They were definitely not the best players of all time. Not the fastest bowlers. No modern day mystery spinner. Not the best wicketkeeper. No Botham/Flintoff replacement. A very, very good set of players but one that relied on preparation, planning and teamwork as much as they did raw talent.
Quite. It's not as if we were losing matches when these allegations were taking place. It is interesting that they were only made public when we started losing and KP was removed from the team. If you're going to be a whistle blower it's best to do so from a position of strength no? Or perhaps Pietersen enjoyed the banter just fine when we were winning.
Common ground would be based on an acceptance that nothing is ever quite as bad or quite as good as it seems in the short run and that there is far more information and misinformation in the public domain than is really helpful. It feeds the 24/7/365 global media frenzy for negative news stories and fuels supporters who swing far too quickly from "brilliant" to "rubbish" about groups of players and managers...We were underperforming for a long time after going to number 1. It was a gradual decline and the skill of our senior players got us out of a lot of self-inflicted holes. If you genuinely look at perormances post that 5-0 whitewash against the Indians you will see a gradual decline to the Ashes humiliation.
Why were we continually losing the first tests of series we'd go on to win? There was a culture of extreme complacency.
The Australian side that we beat 3-0 is probably the worst they have ever sent over here. They weren't fit to wear the shirt.
Common ground would be based on an acceptance that nothing is ever quite as bad or quite as good as it seems in the short run and that there is far more information and misinformation in the public domain than is really helpful. It feeds the 24/7/365 global media frenzy for negative news stories and fuels supporters who swing far too quickly from "brilliant" to "rubbish" about groups of players and managers...
I'm not saying that the ECB and their staff have got everything right, far from it.
I was at a semi-public forum last week where they were very open about how Steve Finn had been mishandled. The main issue for him was that despite his brilliant performance the opinion of the medical experts was that his body would not stand up to the strain of continuous international cricket. So they initiated a period of strength and conditioning work with the best of intentions but a completely unacceptable outcome i.e. he has yet to regain his bowling form since. It is, however, the sort of "mistake" that happens... there is a lot of luck in sport and the interventions of coaches and support staff will occasionally coincide with a loss of form regardless of how expert, and normally helpful, is the work being done. You have to balance Finn's experience against the results of a lot of similar work that has been done with other players to improve the England team performance so much in the past decade compared to the previous 40 years.
This is the million dollar question. The players who took us to number one in the world became "big time" in a way that they hadn't been on the way up... Prior, Swann, Anderson, Broad spring to mind along with KP who had always been that way inclined.My key point is that there was mounting evidence in performance and results that something wasn't right in the 18 months/ 2 years before the last Ashes series. It doesn't appear that the structure and atmosphere was correct to identify and do something about it. Whose responsibility was it to be asking the difficult questions during this period?
Now we are near the start of a new cycle with a different mix of players and a coach having his second crack at it. Things won't be done very differently. There is a limit to how differently it can be done. Win and you're a great coach and have found the ideal approach to managing players and support staff. Lose and you're a crap coach who hasn't got a clue about how to manage players and support staff.
This is the million dollar question. The players who took us to number one in the world became "big time" in a way that they hadn't been on the way up... Prior, Swann, Anderson, Broad spring to mind along with KP who had always been that way inclined.
In response, new goals were set and individual players were encouraged to be open and honest in their dealings with each other and the staff as they sought to find ways to keep their drive and hunger to stay at the top. But key individual and team performances nevertheless went into a downward spiral. Injuries physical and mental started to appear where they hadn't done for a while. All of the best intentions and attempts at "man management" and "maintaining the performance environment" failed to stop the rot....
Now we are near the start of a new cycle with a different mix of players and a coach having his second crack at it. Things won't be done very differently. There is a limit to how differently it can be done. Win and you're a great coach and have found the ideal approach to managing players and support staff. Lose and you're a crap coach who hasn't got a clue about how to manage players and support staff.
The overall failure is that it took us reaching absolute rock bottom before pressing the panic button. It didn't have to be this cycle. This could have been addressed earlier and should have been.
You might think it's just a natural part of sport, but it isn't. South Africa have played 28 series since 2006 and lost just 2 (both to Australia). Now they don't play as many test matches as us, but that is nearly a decade of consistency. Same as Australia for 20 years. What makes me so angry about all this, is that this was our chance to grab a period of dominance in test cricket. Instead its gone almost as quickly as it arrived.
South Africa is an exceptionally strong cricketing nation. Same for Australia. Their climates, combined with school and club sport systems, produce cricketers.You might think it's just a natural part of sport, but it isn't. South Africa have played 28 series since 2006 and lost just 2 (both to Australia). Now they don't play as many test matches as us, but that is nearly a decade of consistency. Same as Australia for 20 years. What makes me so angry about all this, is that this was our chance to grab a period of dominance in test cricket. Instead its gone almost as quickly as it arrived.
Rubbish! Rubbish! Rubbish! Do you really think it makes people perform better by shouting at them when they make a mistake? Dear me - all it does is make the one who shouts feel better for a moment. Good leaders inspire, they don't frighten. Your bowler and skipper when you were 13 should be banned - dreadful attitude. How many kids did they put off playing for ever I wonder?
No difference really,but have they done this after K/P actions re-South Africa ?