Barbecue with the Master … or don't bother

Peter English25-Jan-2006



It’s not a surprise that Glenn McGrath fancies himself as a master of barbecues. He’s grilled 542 Test batsmen to become the world’s most successful fast bowler while impressively improving his stock at No. 11. Now he’s rating himself highly with a pair of tongs and a kiss-the-cook apron. “Little known to the general public,” he reveals, “I am a very competent barbecue cook and have entertained people with my barbecuing skills.”He enters this project with similar focus to a regular service of his bowling action, ladling advice with his personal cooking creed, a history of the barbecue method, notes on the right equipment and tips on which grill and fuel to use. Don’t nod off, the food is coming. However, the recipes, which are battered with commercial product placement, are more “eeewww” than “ooh aah”. While The Matthew Hayden Cookbook, a brave left-field publication, is full of carefully discovered taste mixes and techniques that produce satisfying results, McGrath relies on his business allies for those special – and significant – ingredients.Feel like a Bearnaise sauce with beef fillets? Add a 175-gram pouch of sponsor’s Bearnaise finishing sauce. Anyone for teriyaki chicken drummettes? Half a cup of sponsor’s marinade will do the trick. For mustard steak with garlic mash and onion jam the extras are taken care of with sponsor’s crushed garlic, sponsor’s mild English mustard, and sponsor’s caramelised onion and red wine touches. Mouths of university students can start watering now.Tandoori paste and smokey barbecue marinade are missing from the range – they must still be in testing – as a chicken dish and a ribs plate are the only compilations without a corporate herb, spice or condiment. If the company ever drips meat and vegetables into a jar future editions can be titled .

'Swap Haaland and Vlahovic!' – Pep Guardiola urged to ditch Norway superstar for Juventus ace, who 'would score 50 goals' for Man City

Manchester City have been told to swap Juventus striker Dusan Vlahovic with Erling Haaland as the Serbian can also bag "50 goals a season".

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  • City told to swap Vlahovic for Haaland
  • Juventus star could score '50 goals'
  • Serb has 'nothing less' than Norwegian
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Former Italian goalkeeper Giovanni Galli, who played for AC Milan, Fiorentina and Napoli among others, feels Vlahovic offers "nothing less" than City star Haaland and if he was in a more attack-minded team than the Serie A side, the 23-year-old's goalscoring feats would be as stratospheric.

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    WHAT GIOVANNI GALLI SAID

    He told Tuttisport: “I have a weakness for Dusan. I’ve known him since his time in Florence, he is extraordinary. He has everything. Determination, desire, physicality and a lethal left foot. He is also strong with headers. Right now, he is physically fit, and he is the player we saw at Fiorentina. Physical problems tormented him for a year, but now he is proving to be a champion.

    "It may sound like a provocation, but it’s not. If I were Guardiola and asked to swap Vlahovic and Haaland, I’d do it. Dusan has nothing less than the Norwegian. He must make the most of every chance at Juventus because they don’t produce as many goal-scoring opportunities as Manchester City. But Vlahovic has scored 12 goals anyway. I’d like to see him in a more attacking-minded team. If he were at Manchester City, he’d also score 50 goals per season like Haaland, I am sure about it.”

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    While Haaland has not been as prolific as he was last season, where he scored 52 goals in 53 matches for Pep Guardiola's men, his haul of 19 this term is still significantly better than Vlahovic's tally of 12 for Juventus. Moreover, Haaland has scored 226 goals in 276 games whereas the Serbian international has 87 in 220 career appearances.

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  • WHAT NEXT?

    Haaland, who has been out of action for nearly two months due to a bone stress reaction in his foot, could feature for City away to Brentford on Monday night. Vlahovic, on the other hand, is likely to start against Inter Milan in a top of the table clash with Juve on Sunday night.

Devastated Borren pleads for more cricket

An emotional Peter Borren made another impassioned plea to the ICC to give the Associates and Affiliates more opportunities to play, with Netherlands knocked out of the World T20 after a washout

Sidharth Monga in Dharamsala11-Mar-2016An emotional and distraught Peter Borren has made another impassioned plea to the ICC to give the Associates and Affiliates more opportunities to play, which eventually boils down to spending more money on them. His side Netherlands, perhaps had one bad over with the ball and another with the bat in their first match of this World T20, and they are already out of the event after a washout in their second match.The World Cup, of a format that is considered the most ideal to spread the game to non-traditional outposts, is restricted to 10 teams, which leads to a cruel round of qualifying where only one of four teams goes through. There are no reserve days. This stage of the tournament is almost like a chore that has to be completed. For teams such as Netherlands, they hope they can make these three days the days of their lives, but don’t have any room for error.”It’s a pretty emotional dressing room,” Borren said. “Guys have put a lot of work into this campaign. It started a year ago or close to that starting with the first part of the qualifier in Ireland and Scotland. We shared that trophy and played some really good cricket. We sit here now after playing three hours of cricket against Bangladesh, where we came up short. It’s extremely disappointing. Obviously we can’t do anything about the weather.”There are obviously questions about how much we’ve had to do to get to this stage as it is. We’ve won a lot of games and an eight-run loss to Bangladesh and we’re gone. It’s hard to take.”

Associates’ requests falling on deaf ears – Porterfield

When Peter Borren pleaded for more games, he referred to William Porterfield’s scathing comments after the last World Cup, in Australia. After Ireland bowed out of this World T20, Porterfield said his comments had fallen on deaf ears. “That is why the ICC has the tournament in two phases because they will lose a lot of revenue if one of the ‘top nations’ go out to any of us in the early rounds,’ Porterfield said. “It doesn’t happen in any other sport. Every sport grows. Football has increased the number of teams for the 2023 [sic] World Cup. Rugby have done the same. They are looking to progress their games.
“It is a shame that the ICC at the top level insist on cutting teams. It has fallen on deaf ears a lot of time. After the last World Cup there were quite a few people at the top table who were quite happy that we missed out on run rate. Makes it a bit easier for them to ignore all the comments and let it die over time. This is what happens. It is frustrating from our point of view. We will keep fighting. We have got good performances on the pitch. We come to every major event. Not just major events, we have got four big games this year. Two against Sri Lanka and two against Pakistan at home. Those are the games we have to win especially on home soil to put more pressure, to get even more fixtures.”

While Borren hoped there was a reserve day, he did repeat there can be no excuses for losing to Bangladesh after having competed evenly for 35.5 overs. Looking at the future, though, he was desperately disappointed. He had tweeted earlier in the day, imploring the weather to co-operate because the match was 10% of the cricket they were going to play all year. As of now, they are left with one more T20I, two one-day games against Nepal in the World Cricket League and a four-day game against Afghanistan, and that’s it for the rest of the year.”It’s obviously not enough cricket, that’s fair to say,” Borren said. “If we had managed to get through here, it would have been fantastic. But today’s rain means that we’re in a position where we possibly won’t be playing in a world event for how many years [four]. And in this sort of environment, I’ve been lucky to have played in a few, but it seems like it’s becoming less opportunities for Associate teams, which is frustrating. For me, I’m getting older but some of our young guys… it’s pretty hard to tell a guy like Paul van Meekeren, for example, who bowls four overs, gets 2 for 17 against Bangladesh, that there might be another opportunity if we get really really good cricket over three-four years time. It’s pretty tough.”What do they do to keep this team together and motivated given such few opportunities? “Keeping this unit together, I don’t know, time is an interesting thing,” Borren said. “We have got an interesting blend of experience and younger guys. We are not playing too much cricket. We move our attention to two days time, to the visit of Nepal and Afghanistan later in the summer. We’ve worked very hard to get where we are now. I’m very proud of what we’ve done in the World Cricket League and the I-cup but right now the feeling is absolutely devastated. It’s just a cruel, cruel place to be. I guess, I wish we could find those nine runs somewhere from the other night.”What really seems to have hurt Borren is the fact that the ICC has becomes less concerned about Associates. He acknowledged the hard work of some passionate people at the ICC who work hard towards spreading the game, but asked for a more even share of the revenues cricket generates. “The level of Associate cricket has dramatically improved,” Borren said, crediting ICC’s high performance programme. “The opportunities for games, however, have become far less. Four or five years ago I, we, used to play quite a few games. These days not many with WCL going to a three-year cycle.”I don’t think it is those people who work hard… they do work hard for Associate cricket. But maybe above them there is a sort of malaise towards Associate cricket. To grow further in the game, we always hear it is not commercially viable. We can’t afford to do our own bilateral series. It is very difficult for us. We then hear World Cricket League has gone to a three-year cycle because it is not affordable otherwise. To be honest there is money somewhere. There is a lot of money in cricket. Just not really being spent on expanding the game. Although a bit of it is being spent, the revenue should be spread more far out so that we have that opportunity to play more.”Borren had a message for those who feel the Associates don’t deserve a healthier share of the revenue because they don’t generate it: “I will tell them we don’t need that much. We are not looking for millions and millions of dollars. Just a very small percentage of this huge amount. Obviously we are not going to probably be the source of much revenue, we understand that, but if the game wants to grow, then surely the revenue needs to be shared more evenly not just amongst three, eight, ten teams but throughout the Associates and Affiliates as well.”I can remember William Porterfield saying pretty similar stuff after the 2015 world cup. People keep saying ‘fair enough’, ‘fair enough’, but there is no real change. That can be extremely frustrating. Real change would be welcomed in world of cricket. For example I watch Indian TV, going through the channels, highlights of us beating England, so we think, ‘Hang on, everyone likes watching that, everyone likes watching new teams do well, you know give us the opportunity.”

Christian hits second fastest century in English domestic cricket

Dan Christian’s 37-ball hundred was the second quickest in England and the seventh fastest of all time as Notts Outlaws ruled the roost at Wantage Road

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Jul-2018
ScorecardDan Christian struck the one of the fastest hundreds in the history of T20 to get Nottinghamshire off the mark at the second attempt in the Vitality Blast with a 58-run win at Northamptonshire.Christian’s 37-ball century with seven fours and eight sixes was the joint-seventh fastest in the history of the format and the second-fastest in the domestic game. It was Christian’s second T20 hundred and the third T20 hundred by a Notts batsman.His brutal hitting saw Notts rack up 219 for 6 – equalling the highest T20 total at Wantage Road only set on Wednesday – and despite Ben Duckett’s 88 from 45 balls, Northants were bowled out for 161.Northants’ captain Alex Wakely said: “I was pretty proud of the response after our defeat in the first game. We were a bit of a shambles on Wednesday but we were on the ball today and put them under early pressure before one bloke came out and played a pretty special knock.”Christian arrived at the crease with Notts 81 for 4 in the 10th over having been sent in and set about dismantling the Northants bowling with some of the cleanest hitting seen at Northampton. He struck three consecutive sixes off Graeme White’s left-arm spin – over deep midwicket, long-off and then a huge strike a long way back over long-on.

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He saved his biggest strike for Nathan Buck who was hammered over his head and onto the roof of the Ken Turner Stand among an over that cost 28 before the final over of the innings, bowled by Rory Kleinveldt, disappeared for 22 with two more Christian sixes. 80 runs came from the final five overs.Christian’s partnership with Samit Patel added 97 runs in 45 balls to take Notts to a total beyond their ambitions at the half-way stage. Patel skipped down to lift White over long-on and heaved him through midwicket for four in his 35 in 26 balls.Northants had removed their usual tormentor, Riki Wessels, for just 6 – bowled trying to pull Ben Sanderson – and also picked up Tom Moores for 15 and Steven Mullaney for 21 in a Powerplay that yielded 50 for 3 but Christian’s brilliance from there effectively won the game.Duckett kept Northants in the game for the first half of the chase, by flashing past fifty in only 17 balls. He took 30 from the third over, bowled by Samit Patel with a succession of sweeps. Three consecutive sixes preceded three consecutive fours. He swung Mullaney into the sight-screen at the Wilson End but trying to hit the same bowler over the off side, top-edged to Paul Coughlin who claimed a fine catch on his Notts debut.But Duckett was the only batsman to show for Northants who lost Richard Levi to a leg-side strange for just 3 and Josh Cobb caught at deep-midwicket for only 6. The chase suffered a huge blow when Alex Wakely was sent back by Duckett trying to come back for a second run and was run out for 11 after a diving save on the boundary by Will Fraine.After Duckett’s dismissal, Northants subsided and when Harry Gurney took out Buck’s leg-stump, victory was completed by a handsome margin to get the defending champions underway for 2018.

Will Lionel Messi be fit to play against Newell's Old Boys? Tata Martino offers injury update on Inter Miami superstar after World Tour controversy

Inter Miami manager Gerardo Martino has revealed whether injured Lionel Messi will take to the field against Newell's Old Boys.

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  • Martino provided update on Messi's condition
  • Suffered hamstring injury during Asia tour
  • Set to face boyhood club Newell's Old Boys
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Inter Miami are all set to face the Argentine club in their final pre-season friendly in Miami before they kick off their 2024 Major League Soccer season campaign next week. Lionel Messi, who remained out of action for the majority of the team's tour to Asia, has been cleared to face his boyhood club as confirmed by manager Gerardo 'Tata' Martino.

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  • WHAT GERARDO MARTINO SAID

    Speaking at an event held at the Mana Wynwood Convention Center in Miami, the former Barcelona coach revealed that the 36-year-old has regained full fitness and is ready to start against his former side.

    Martino told reporters, "Lio (Messi) is fine and will start. He's a starter."

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The World Cup-winning Argentina skipper landed in trouble with Chinese authorities after he failed to play even a minute during the club's friendly encounter against a selected Hong Kong XI last week. A hamstring injury forced the star player to remain out of action but his absence on the pitch angered local fans and officials. The Beijing Football Association has reportedly cancelled Argentina's international friendlies against Nigeria and Ivory Coast where Messi was supposed to feature in March.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR INTER MIAMI?

    The Herons are on the verge of completing the signing of another Argentine star as they are set to beat Bayern Munich in the race to sign Federico Redendo – son of former Real Madrid star Fernando Redondo. They will begin the new MLS season on February 22 against Real Salt Lake.

’Nothing but love’ – Christian Pulisic sends message to AC Milan ‘family’ as USMNT talisman receives death threats by Lazio fans following fiery Serie A victory

Christian Pulisic says he feels "nothing but love" to AC Milan after receiving death threats from Lazio fans following Friday's fiery Serie A victory.

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  • Pulisic got two Lazio players sent off
  • Milan snatched a 1-0 victory
  • USMNT forward sends love to Rossoneri family
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Noah Okafor might have won the match for Milan but it was Pulisic who was responsible for getting two of the three players sent off on Friday evening that opened up spaces in defence. The American midfielder's clash with Luca Pellegrini resulted in the Roma star's dismissal, while a late altercation with Matteo Guendouzi saw the former Arsenal man receive his marching orders as well.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Following the game, Pulisic received death threats and vile messages from Lazio supporters, prompting concerns about the player's safety. However, the USMNT player has kept his composure and sent out a message of "love" for his teammates and the fans amid a difficult situation.

  • WHAT PULISIC SAID

    In an Instagram post, Pulisic said: "Nothing but love for this squad and the entire Rossoneri family ❤️🖤"

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Pulisic has been in inspirational form in Serie A with seven goals and six assists in 25 appearances. He will now look to perform in the same vein in the Europa League when the Rossoneri welcome Czech club Slavia Pragu, to San Siro for the first leg of the last-16 tie on Thursday.

Mortaza makes haste, slowly

On the field, Mashrafe Mortaza performs one of the most thankless jobs in cricket: spearhead the fast bowling attack of a subcontinent team

Sidharth Monga in Chittagong18-May-2007


After missing the first ODI against India due to injury, Mashrafe bowled the first ball of his comeback match at 86 mph
© AFP

There’s a mad man loose at the Bangladesh nets. It has been raining incessantly in Chittagong; the third one-dayer between Bangladesh and India looks improbable, and the players have moved to the indoor facility. Mashrafe Mortaza spots a mini football and wants to dribble past his friend Abdur Razzak. Next, he wants to keep heading it forever – cap in one hand, the other gesturing towards the forehead, as though saying “I have magic there, I can make it talk with my head”. He wants Syed Rasel to bowl him bouncers with that ball and he hooks them. He wants to beat up Rasel and chases him all over the nets. He aims with the ball from one end and hits Rasel smack in the head. All the while his face, his hands and legs keep moving, expressing, telling the story. This isn’t body language, more a conference of polyglots.On the field, Mortaza performs one of the most thankless jobs in cricket: spearhead the fast bowling attack of a subcontinent team. He does that remarkably well. Only a few days ago, he had missed a match because of injury. On his comeback, the first ball flew at 86mph.Where does he get all this energy from? “I think I am strong,” he says with a confidence that in anyone else would have sounded arrogant. Mortaza’s strength comes from his first love: the river Chitra, which flows just opposite his house in Narail. “I loved swimming from childhood; I’d swim, with friends or kids tied to my back, from noon to 3 pm or so.” He also had a penchant for climbing coconut trees; on his wedding day last September, one of his guests joked that there were no coconuts. Mortaza made for the nearest tree in a flash; it took a lot of effort to keep him down. Anyway, he swam in the Chitra that night.His team-mates and friends call him , an affectionate term loosely translated as madman. “Maybe I am a bit like that”, he acknowledges. When he was young – he’s 23 now – he was a veritable circus on the road. “I did a lot of tricks with my bike.” When he was younger still, he would jump 20 feet off a bridge and on to moving trucks. “I used to do it everyday. Not now,” he says. “I have stopped the bike antics too. My father doesn’t like it. He thinks as a player I shouldn’t be doing all this.”Mortaza was so in love with Narail that he didn’t like travelling. At the age of 17, a grand-uncle who was a coach at Dhaka’s Mohammedan Sporting club, asked Mortaza to join the team, which was short of players, for a match about an hour’s journey from Narail. He agreed only after his grandmother convinced him, and took six wickets against Kashim City. He returned, but the bug had bitten; soon he was bound for the under-17 zonal camp, where he was picked by Malcolm Pareira for a tour of Sri Lanka; then to the under-19 side, and finally the national side. All this, and stints with Andy Roberts too.The lows are as clear in his mind as the highs. Mortaza remembers the worst day of his career. “Once Zimbabwe [at Harare last August] needed 17 runs off the last over.” He looks down, smiles, and says, “I gave them. That was the worst day for me.” The simplicity conveys the anguish.Dav Whatmore, the coach, was good support then. “He said, ‘When you wake up the next day, it will be hard for you. But don’t worry, just keep working.'” A day later, Mortaza was heard telling a friend, “This will never happen to me again. Even if I try to do it, this will never happen.”He remembers when he dropped Ricky Ponting in the Fatullah Test last year, a catch which, if taken, might well have caused the biggest upset in cricket history. “There was a breeze, and I was three seconds late.” It plays on his mind whenever they are close to winning an important match.He fondly remembers his Man-of-the-Match performance against India at the World Cup, and also Sachin Tendulkar’s wicket at Chittagong in 2004-05. He has seen and felt the change of the other teams’ attitude towards Bangladesh. “They used to ignore us earlier. They would think, ‘Bangladesh is coming; we will win easily.’ Nowadays, they cannot afford to do this,” he says. “It used to hurt a lot.”But it was nice”, he adds wryly, “to see India celebrate so much after beating us.”
At 23, he has seen a lot of cricket, has travelled the world, yet he still misses the good life of Narail. “I miss everything. Friends, family,” he says, sounding like a 17-year-old on his first tour. “But as a professional cricketer, you have to do all this.” All of a sudden the country’s leading paceman takes over. In three seconds, his face has changed from a child’s to that of a grown-up.Mortaza is, if possible, a wise mad man. Part of the maturity stems from a long list of injuries and operations – three operations on his left knee, one on the right, many stress fractures of his back, shoulder problems and two torn ankle ligaments. He has spent agonising days in hospitals – injury after injury, operation after operation. He recently lost Manjural Islam Rana, his close friend and team-mate, in a motor accident.Most significantly, Mortaza has started to realise his responsibility as Bangladesh’s leading pace bowler. He has become more measured. That shows in his bowling. “I love bowling fast but in the past two years I haven’t been bowling really fast,” he says. “I am getting fit and back. I think I can bowl really fast now but I like to bowl in the right areas. [Glenn] McGrath, [Brett] Lee, everyone told me I should bowl in the right areas.” He also believes he has the ability to raise his speed whenever he wants to. He has started to read the batsmen and started to work them out. “This is an aspect I have improved a lot in. I like to read a batsman.”His goal is to become one of the world’s top-10 bowlers in Tests. In one-dayers too, but Tests especially. “Test match is the real cricket.” He has started taking his batting seriously. “The coach tells me I can be a good batsman.” Dinesh Mongia will testify to that.On an average, he goes back home once about two months. “I love the river. I like sitting there and chatting with my friends. Even if I am not swimming, I like to just sit there.”Mortaza has changed. There’s a price he is paying. “I can’t injure myself anymore.”

Blue cards in football?! Why revolutionary new colour is set to be trialed in first major change since 1970 World Cup

Blue cards are set to be introduced to football as part of a trial from the International Football Association Board (IFAB).

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  • Blue cards set to be trialed
  • Will mean temporary expulsion
  • Won't be used in the top-tier
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    IFAB has approved the introduction of the new cards which is the first change of its kind since yellow and red cards were brought in at the 1970 World Cup, reports. The announcement will be made on Friday.

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    THE EXPLANATION

    Blue cards will be used as part of a sin-bin trial to send players off the field for 10 minutes for committing cynical fouls – infractions that prevent a promising attack – or dissent, the report says. Top-tier competitions will not be part of the trials, which could start next season, but cup competitions could be volunteered.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Sin bins have already been in use at grassroots level but will be added to the professional game as of next season. UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin has already spoken out against the idea, saying: "It’s not football anymore."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    IFAB will announce the trial of blue cards on Friday, with the trial expected to begin next season. The temporary banishments will not be used in the European Championship this summer or the 2024-25 Champions League.

VIDEO: 'S****ing' – Everton star James Tarkowski and wife Samantha give brutally honest answer when asked about favourite activity

Everton's James Tarkowski and wife Samantha made little attempt to hide the truth when asked about their favourite pastime in a new reality series.

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  • Tarkowski and wife Samantha interview
  • Reveal favourite activity to do together
  • New show focuses on lives of players' partners
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The couple were quizzed during Amazon's series which focuses on the lives of several players and their partners. Asked what was their favourite thing to do together, Samantha burst into laughter asking what time the show will be aired. The former England defender took a more direct approach with a simple one-word answer — "shagging".

    X@primevideosport

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  • THE GOSSIP

    The centre-back copped some online ribbing earlier in the week when a social media trailer for the series showed Tarkowski flirting with his wife, leading some fans to jokingly call for Everton to be hit with a further points deduction as punishment.

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR JAMES TARKOWSKI?

    Tarkowski and his Everton team-mates head to the south coast on Saturday looking to repeat their feats of last season when they stunned Brighton and Hove Albion with a 5-1 win which proved crucial to their Premier League survival.

'I'm not here to have Bangladesh win a game or two'

It’s not about beating the best sides on your day but about building a team that can compete consistently at the highest level, Bangladesh’s coach tells Cricinfo

Interview by Khondaker Mirazur Rahman15-Sep-2008

‘Our supporters cannot have a team that entertains from ball one by hitting the ball in the air, and expect them to also score a lot of runs at international level. It won’t happen’
© AFP

What was your motivation for taking up the Bangladesh job?

I took the position as it was an amazing opportunity to coach an international cricket team, and it was a natural progression from my position as assistant coach of Australia, where we had won the World Cup, The Champions Trophy, and regained the Ashes. I wanted to bring my knowledge and experience to Bangladesh and take them forward.In terms of cricket ability, where do Bangladesh stand now?
It is not a question of cricket ability but a question of cricket schooling. Our coaches, competition, and facilities are just not preparing our players for the tough world of international cricket. Our players are as skillful as any, but we are lacking in depth when it comes to consistent performers at the highest level of cricket.You have been trying to change the cricket culture of Bangladesh and also the way the players approach their game. Why is that important?
At present, and before I came on board, we had no players in our side that you could say are truly successful international cricketers. We love them and they are our heroes but they do not have the results or statistics that their oppositions have. Our batsmen average 20 and the opposition batsmen average 45-50. Our bowlers average 45 and the opposition average 25. This suggested to me that things – and team culture is one of them – needed to change. I have taken a long-term approach and may never see the results of my work. The players are learning to train and prepare in a more professional and responsible manner, where we are trying to improve so that we can be consistently competitive, not just when all the stars are aligned and we have a “good day”. We have several players in the team at the moment who I believe have the ability to lead from the front and be world-class players that we can count on each time we play. This is what I am excited about for Bangladesh Cricket and our supporters.Isn’t trying to force a change in the natural style of play fraught with risk?
There is such a misconception about how I want my players to play. I will just say that the batsmen are instructed to think of every ball as an opportunity to hit a four or a six, but if the ball is too good and the risk or percentage for success is not good, then we must do something else. The game is about making runs and I encourage my players to look to score at every opportunity. Our supporters cannot have a team that entertains from ball one by hitting the ball in the air, and expect them to also score a lot of runs at international level. It won’t happen. We will lose wickets and fail nine times out of ten as we have done in the past. There needs to be a balance of responsibility and structure to our batting. We are a team that in the past used to pass 200 in our innings just one time in four at the crease. We now do this every second time we play. I look for success in lots of ways. Winning is a result of a lot of successes in the process.How is coaching Bangladesh different from coaching Australia or any other international team?
In Australia there is an amazing domestic infrastructure, which culminates in the best first-class competition in the world. The international players, when not playing for the country, simply go back to their state cricket system and train with their state team-mates and coaches, fitness trainers, physios, doctors and so on. In Bangladesh our players must stay in Dhaka to train and get any coaching they need. There are just no real facilities for them in the home areas, but the cricket board and I have identified this and are planning to improve in this area.

With Australia you are talking tactics and teaching new shots and small aspects of the game; with our team you spend every day just teaching them the basics of the game, things that they should know when they are 15 or 16

Our players are just so inexperienced in terms of decision-making and being ready for international standard. With Australia you are talking tactics and teaching new shots and small aspects of the game; with our team you spend every day just teaching them the basics of the game, things that they should know when they are 15 or 16. This is because our infrastructure and pathway is not good enough at present.What are the major obstacles that are holding Bangladesh back in international cricket?
International cricket is as competitive as it has ever been. We have seen India beat Australia in Australia in a one-day series. Then Pakistan won the tri-series in Bangladesh. This was followed by Sri Lanka beating us all to win the Asia Cup in Pakistan. All three of these teams are at the top of their games and are capable of pushing the world No. 1. We are still a young cricket country and are still to get our facilities and infrastructure to where they need to be to produce world-class success stories. We are aware of our deficiencies in this area and know that it will take time to develop them to the high standard required.At the moment the players selected have still got many areas that need to be improved if they are to perform consistently at the highest level. The pathway at present does not allow those flaws to be ironed out before they are selected. Our players learn the hard way, in the public eye, on the international stage. I know we have won games at times in the past, but I ask: have we really produced a world-class cricketer that we can rely on year in year out?Recently Bangladesh have shown signs of improvement in batting, but the bowling has deteriorated significantly. Has having a specialist bowling coach like Champaka Ramanayake in your coaching staff helped?
It is fantastic to have Ramanayeke in our system at the moment. He was a regular at our training before the Australian tour, so we have access to his assistance when we need or want him. His bowling squad regularly attends our training sessions as well.There is a perception among cricket fans and media that you are downplaying the successes achieved by your predecessor Dave Whatmore, to cover up the recent failures of Bangladesh team.
I have the utmost respect for Dav. He is a personal friend and we speak from time to time. Success is measured in many ways, and I would love the team to grab a couple of wins here and there – as Dav and the boys did in his time. However, I am not here just to have the team win a game or two. I am trying to develop this squad and the future of Bangladesh cricket to a point where they can compete regularly against the top-ranked teams. This will take time as the players have so many lessons to learn and skills to develop. There are no easy wins out there at the moment. All the teams we have played recently are very strong and on the move forward.I continually talk about success and improvement. We have a young team, and when you are developing you must base success on achievement, not on the win-loss figures. I hate the word “failure” when used to describe our team. They have had so many achievements in the nine months I have been with them. It is the long term that the people of Bangladesh must look at, not the immediate high of a win. Though I admit it would be nice at the moment to get you guys off our backs and increase the confidence of all. We now have more potential world-class players than ever before and the future is as bright as ever.

‘Our players learn the hard way, in the public eye, on the international stage’
© AFP

There was once a belief that Bangladesh could compete with any team on their day, which no longer appears to be the case. Do you think you are a bit too pessimistic about Bangladesh’s chance of winning against the top eight teams, which is affecting the team morale?
The problem is, people have no idea how I talk to my team on a daily basis. The players are aware that our vision is to always improve. I would love to know what “on their day” means. I am not interested in coaching a team that relies on luck or it being their day. I am concerned with improving skills and confidence, so that we believe in ourselves every time we compete. We do believe that if we play to the best of our ability then we can win.The other thing I need to say is that the team under Dav were given plenty of games against the so-called minnow teams prior to the World Cup. This allowed them to win a lot of games in the lead-up and gain some momentum. They then went on to win two very big games [against India and South Africa], in perfect conditions for our style of cricket. In my time so far, we have been scheduled to play the No. 2 sides in the world in two series, and the No. 1 recently. We also had a series in New Zealand, which is very tough to tour. We have had just one three-match series against a minor team [Ireland], a team that actually beat us at the World Cup. We completely outplayed them and won the series 3-0.Are you happy with the progress Bangladesh have made over the last ten months under your coaching?
As I have said previously there are so many examples of success within our team lately. The elusiveness of victory is not helping the public see this, though. We have scored our highest scores ever against India and Pakistan in the last three months. We have had five players make their first or second ODI centuries. We have a 19-year-old, Raqibul Hasan, who is shaping to be an international player of the future.How do you explain Bangladesh’s recent performance in Australia?
I can say that the results were very disappointing and the lessons learnt were hard ones. The players were simply overwhelmed by the world No. 1 team. They know they are better than they showed us in this series and are determined to gain some credibility back in the near future. We should have won the third match in Darwin. Our bowlers, and in particular our fielders, were superb in keeping Australia to 198 in their 50 overs.We were a little unlucky at the beginning of our tour to lose two opening batsmen before the first practice match, and then to lose Raqibul with a broken thumb in the first ODI. We simply don’t have the depth just yet to replace an opener and our best No. 4 batsman. This left us very unbalanced and even more vulnerable than we were at the beginning. No excuses though – the team have underperformed and are embarrassed by their efforts.During the Australia series you were very critical about Ashraful in public. What were you trying to achieve? Was it a desperate attempt to bring some responsibility to Ashraful’s batting?
I am always talking to Ash about his performances, both good and bad. We are trying to get him to be more consistent and contribute to the score more often. Ash has made maybe just four or five half-centuries in his last 50 innings and I felt it was worth a try to say that we need more from him as captain and a key batsman in our line-up. Ash was sitting beside me and I only stated the obvious. You might consider it as an honest attempt to make him aware of his responsibilities.I believe we have been too focused on Ash and what he is capable of. We have many batsmen who have made centuries for us and who are real match-winners in our team. These are the players that will make us a successful team; one man cannot do it alone. I hope Ash can find the game that he needs to play his role for us. Everyone thinks he is one of our best players. He needs to show this by making consistent big scores.It has also been said that I tried to remove Ash as captain of the team during the Australia tour. I have never, and would never, do that. He has the toughest job in world cricket and his players do not always back him up with consistent performances. I have told him that if he is under too much pressure and he feels his batting is suffering due to captaincy, then he should consider resting from it. A run-making Ash is better for his team than to have him as captain and not making runs.Do you think the team is a bit too youth-oriented and lacks experienced players?
Yes, we lack experienced players, but you cannot have experienced players in your side who are failing all the time – they will not offer guidance when they are not performing themselves. We have no experienced players out of the team at the moment who demand selection because they are performing, or have performed recently in international cricket. If we had an experienced player who was demanding to be picked because of performances then I would be asking the selectors to pick him.

I do not base success on win-loss figures, as this is demoralising to a developing side – they would see every loss as a failure, irrespective of whether they have made a century or taken five wickets

What about someone like Habibul Bashar?

Habibul is one of our centrally contracted players. He is not currently in our team but is a helpful and welcome addition at training. He understands better than most just how hard it is to be successful at international level. I would love to have a performing Habibul in our team. However, he is not at the top of his game and was omitted some time ago after many opportunities. A non-performing senior can’t really influence the game of his team-mates. We would not leave a senior player out of our young team if they had the potential to be a match-winner or be in our team come the next World Cup.What do you expect from the upcoming New Zealand series?
I do not base success on win-loss figures, as this is demoralising to a developing side – they would see every loss as a failure, irrespective of whether they have made a century or taken five wickets. Our young team, whether we like it or not, will lose a few games before they start to win consistently. I want to be realistic here; we have to raise our game to beat teams like New Zealand. The series is on our home soil, the conditions should favor us. If we can play up to our potential, there is no reason why we can’t compete and produce some good results.I expect us to have a lot of players achieving great things against New Zealand, and I also believe we will show that we are improving by winning games in this series. Winning would be amazing for all of us.Where do you want to see Bangladesh at the end of your initial two-year contract?
We will still be ranked ninth in the world when my two years are up. What I have embarked on is not going to bear much fruit inside two years. What I want to see is that we have started to compete and are consistent in the plans and the processes we need to follow in order to push and beat teams regularly. My intentions have always been to produce some world-class performers who can carry the team to new heights on a consistent basis. And the exciting thing is, there are three or four players who may just do that.

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