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6 foreign coaches including Paul Franks (CP) & Paul Nixon (Sindh) to work in the domestic season

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Pakistan appears the place to be this winter but away from the bright lights and packed stadiums of England’s security-heavy tour, two aspirational coaches from the county system are about to embark on an intriguing assignment of their own.

Paul Franks, assistant to Peter Moores at Nottinghamshire after two decades as the club’s uncompromising all-rounder, has been appointed head coach of Central Punjab for Pakistan’s domestic season, with the 43-year-old overseeing their campaigns in the four-day Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and the 50-over Pakistan Cup.

Joining Franks as his No 2 will be Bilal Shafayat, 38, who since his own playing career has coached the Notts’ age-group levels and second XI. Their four-month deal goes against the tide of seeking winter work on the Twenty20 circuit and at a time when the national set-up keeps looking to overseas coaches, it shows impressive ambition.

“This was too good to turn down,” Franks tells the Guardian. “It came about through a little bit of word of mouth and possibly Trent Rockets winning the Hundred when I was assistant to Andy Flower. He and Peter [Moores] are two incredible coaches who have trusted me to do my job as I see it and that’s probably helped.

“I’ve worked in the T10 league in Abu Dhabi and the temptation would be to find more gigs in franchise cricket. But I wanted to get out of my comfort zone a little, really experience a different culture and hopefully grow as a coach.

“Four-day and 50-over cricket may not be as fashionable right now but I want to work across all formats. And I’ve got ambitions to go as far as I can in my career. I want to help this team be the best they can be but also learn from the players too.”

Franks describes the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy that starts next week as “unforgiving – even by county standards”, with six regional sides playing each other twice over a two-month period before a five-day final. Rather than home and away, the teams tour the country together, with Rawalpindi, Faisalabad, Multan and Lahore the host venues.

Central Punjab is an amalgamation of Faisalabad, Sialkot and Lahore under the slimmed-down domestic structure introduced in 2019, winning the first two titles before last year’s mid-table finish. Babar Azam is their star, in theory, but Franks does not expect the Pakistan captain to be around much due to international commitments.

Players such as Azhar Ali and Faheem Ashraf will be working towards the Tests against England in December, however, and Franks hopes he and Shafayat help others push for selection. “My style is very much for them,” says Franks. “We will put in structures and some non-negotiables but whether in form or out of form, we will have their back.

“Bilal speaks Urdu – I have picked up a bit working with the UAE national team in the past – but he’s way more than a translator, he’s an excellent coach in his own right and reads the game superbly. He will be an important link with the squad.”

Needless to say the job will not take place in the same ring of steel surrounding the England T20 and Test tours this winter but Franks is comfortable with what will be his first visit to Pakistan since an under-19s tour in 1997.

“I’m someone who just wants to get on with it,” says Franks, in the matter-of-fact way that earned him the nickname of “The General” at Trent Bridge. And should the current England set-up require any intel, a coach with international ambitions is keen to help.

“England have a lot of well-researched people on their support staff but if there are local players they want some more info on, or, say, conditions at the Test venues, I’ll be at the end of the phone,” he adds. “I am aspirational and make no bones about it.

“I hope this role furthers that. I want to learn about myself, cricket in Pakistan and hopefully bring those experiences back to Notts next season.”

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...-trend-central-punjab-switch?CMP=share_btn_tw
 
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No idea how they will bridge the language barrier in these assignments.
 
No idea how they will bridge the language barrier in these assignments.

Bilal Shafayat is the assistant coach and will translate.

Central Punjab won the inaugural tournament and then shared it the following year, but dipped badly last season.

They've got experienced batsmen but they didn't look like taking 20 wickets against the top sides (KPK, Northern and Sindh), and the only two teams they beat were the two weakest in Southern Punjab and Balochistan.
 
Bilal Shafayat is the assistant coach and will translate.

Central Punjab won the inaugural tournament and then shared it the following year, but dipped badly last season.

They've got experienced batsmen but they didn't look like taking 20 wickets against the top sides (KPK, Northern and Sindh), and the only two teams they beat were the two weakest in Southern Punjab and Balochistan.

He could really help bring on some of the youngsters, including Qasim, Irfan Niazi, Faizan, Abdullah Shafique et al.
 
He could really help bring on some of the youngsters, including Qasim, Irfan Niazi, Faizan, Abdullah Shafique et al.

Geo are reporting that Paul Nixon (Leicestershire's coach) will be Sindh's head coach too.

Preparing for a nuclear explosion from Basit Ali. Not sure how Karachi media will handle a foreign coach.
 
Geo are reporting that Paul Nixon (Leicestershire's coach) will be Sindh's head coach too.

Preparing for a nuclear explosion from Basit Ali. Not sure how Karachi media will handle a foreign coach.

Best news ever because the Sindh coaches and the Rishta with the older players is holding back not only Sindh but PK
 
Best news ever because the Sindh coaches and the Rishta with the older players is holding back not only Sindh but PK

sindh board is the worst in , I'll massage your back if you massage mine ,continously playing best mates in the playing xi
 
Geo are reporting that Paul Nixon (Leicestershire's coach) will be Sindh's head coach too.

Preparing for a nuclear explosion from Basit Ali. Not sure how Karachi media will handle a foreign coach.


whilst I’m unclear on the aptitude of Nixon and Franks, I think this is a very interesting experiment.

To clarify, Geo have said that these will work alongside current coaching staff I.e. Razzaq and Basit.
 
whilst I’m unclear on the aptitude of Nixon and Franks, I think this is a very interesting experiment.

To clarify, Geo have said that these will work alongside current coaching staff I.e. Razzaq and Basit.
https://www.geosuper.tv/latest/18706-pcb-appoints-english-coaches-for-central-punjab-sindh

They're saying Franks will work with Razzaq but Nixon will be Sindh's head coach ?

It would be strange in fairness to sack Basit after a National T20 Cup win.

Still no announcement of squads either so all up in the air.
 
https://www.geosuper.tv/latest/18706-pcb-appoints-english-coaches-for-central-punjab-sindh

They're saying Franks will work with Razzaq but Nixon will be Sindh's head coach ?

It would be strange in fairness to sack Basit after a National T20 Cup win.

Still no announcement of squads either so all up in the air.

In the article you attached, it says the following:

“Nixon, will join Sindh’s side for the tournament. Nixon has 355 first-class matches and 19 One-Day Internationals for England.

Nixon is also the head coach at Leicestershire County Cricket Club.

The existing coaching staff of the team will also work with him in the setup.”

That to me indicates that the existing Local coach stays in place. I also think that the Sindh coach is Ghulam Ali rather than Basit, but I could be wrong.
 
Good news. Pakistan desperately needs experise from overseas at national but also domestic level because the home based ex-players and coaches simply don't have a clue what they're doing.

I wonder how Mohsin Khan's die hard fans will take this :))
 
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Lahore, 25 September 2022: Six foreign coaches including two former England international cricketers will work in the domestic season 2022-23 – which includes premier Quaid-e-Azam Trophy 2022-23 starting later next week. The event schedule and squads will be announced in due course.

England’s former international Paul Franks who has worked as assistant head coach at Nottinghamshire county in the English circuit and possesses a coaching experience of about 10 years will coach Central Punjab.

Another former international, wicketkeeper-batter Paul Nixon who had coached Jamaican Tallawahs to two Caribbean Premier League titles will be head coach of Sindh – who recently won National T20 2022-23 – their maiden T20 title since the inception of new domestic system.

Nixon is currently working as head coach of the Leicestershire County cricket, he will be relinquishing the role in the coming days before traveling to Pakistan to take up the new assignment.

Along with these two head coaches, four foreign coaches – Bilal Shafayat (Central Punjab), John Sadler (Sindh) will be fielding coaches and Richard Stonier (Central Punjab), Ian Fisher (Sindh) will be strength and conditioning coaches.

Director High Performance, Nadeem Khan: “The introduction of foreign coaches in the domestic cricket is aimed at creating diversity. Whenever you bring coaches from different countries you introduce diversity and new ideas. These experienced foreign coaches working with the local coaches will ultimately help in the growth of the players.

“We are also bringing fielding and strength and conditioning coaches in the setup. This will benefit our local coaches and will bring more competitiveness in both departments of the game. The players will eventually benefit from them.

“These coaches will work in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy and Pakistan Cup tournaments. Initially we have brought the two head coaches with Central Punjab and Sindh to see how it works in our setup and how much it proves to be beneficial for the players. We will assess the performances at the end of the season.”

Central Punjab head coach, Paul Franks:

“We have got exciting talent all around. I am looking forward to seeing everybody. I love coaching and I really enjoy coaching for the right reasons. It's all about the players and I am really excited about the next few months here in Pakistan.

“I have been to Pakistan before; I came with England U19 in the late 1990s. Then I was a very young man making my way in the game and I loved the enthusiasm for the game. But I always said to myself that I would want to come back one day. This opportunity as a coach doesn’t come around all the time. It was too good an opportunity to miss and I am really looking forward to working with the players. Some of whom I know very well from their associations, with the international team.

“I will make sure that the whole coaching staff, the wider group are all on the same page. I really want the players to express themselves. I want them to play with a smile on their face. I want them to enjoy the game.

“We have to believe that if we do certain things and we strive for the right achievements, particularly in the longer format, we'll put ourselves in a position where we can create winning opportunities.”

Sindh head coach, Paul Nixon:

“Pakistan is a wonderful place to play cricket and who wouldn't want the opportunity of coming to Pakistan. I have seen the Sindh team play so well in the T20 of late. They've been outstanding, their balance of experience and youth is just incredible. They've got some exciting, international cricketers and seriously, good, talented youth coming through as well.

“For me seeing this side, it's a very special team that could do special things and they can be serial winners. I really believe that they've got the ability to win consistently, in all formats.

“Sarfaraz Ahmed as a leader brings the calmness and the experience, he is a very honest, open cricketer. Mir Hamza, who's been over to Sussex, bowled beautifully over there in England, he is a high class player to have in our side. Saim Ayub looks a magnificent young left-hander batter, very positive attacking player, which is exactly what we need.

“Ghulam Ali has coached the side really well. I am looking forward to building a great relationship based on trust and integrity. I am also looking forward to learning from him as well.”

Six Cricket Associations coaching staff

Balochistan – Mushtaq Ahmed (head coach), Raj Hans (assistant coach), Hussain Baksh Khosha (fielding coach), Mazhar Deenari* (fielding coach) and Muhammad Hussain (strength & conditioning coach)

Central Punjab – Paul Franks (head coach), Abdul Razzaq (assistant coach), Humayun Farhat* (assistant coach), Bilal Shafayat (fielding coach) and Richard Stonier (strength & conditioning coach)

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa – Abdur Rehman (head coach), Riffatullah Mohmand (assistant coach), Sajid Shah* (fielding coach), Saqib Faqir (fielding coach), Ibrar Ahmed * (strength & conditioning coach) and Imranullah (strength and conditioning coach)

Northern – Ijaz Ahmed (head coach), Samiullah Khan Niazi (assistant coach), Fahad Akram (fielding coach) and Farrukh Hayyat (strength and conditioning coach)

Sindh – Paul Nixon (head coach), Ghulam Ali (assistant coach), Tahir Mehmood* (assistant coach), John Sadler (fielding coach) and Ian Fisher (strength and conditioning coach)

Southern Punjab – Shahid Anwar (head coach), Aizaz Cheema (assistant coach), Irfan Fazil (fielding coach) and Taimoor Mehmood (strength and conditioning coach)

*They are temporary appointments until the coaches are busy with Pakistan Junior League
 
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How on earth this corrupt Ijaz Ahmed keep getting top jobs after his past and then bad treatment to Qasim Akram
 
Wasn’t Leicestershire dead last in division 2 this year? Doesn’t necessarily mean the coach is the problem but just hope they did some homework before selecting him
 
If PCB really run out of money why they can't appoint Assitant coach Shahid Aslam as a head coach. He has experience working with Micky as well. Could be far better than Saqlain for sure.
 
Most coaches make no difference but the one that can is a fielding coach because with hard work with a technical coach a player can definitely improve.
 
Great move by PCB, hope they can also select players on merit in the squad and get rid of dead, old and non-performing leeches..

Good to see the ground work has started, hopefully with a lead up to the national side..

Language is not barrier in these places, when a foreginer who doesnt entertain chamchas and just do work normally, the bar will be raised and becomes a norm.

Looking forward to Central and Sindh performances..
 
Most coaches make no difference but the one that can is a fielding coach because with hard work with a technical coach a player can definitely improve.

I hope they have a say in the selecting the playing X1....but looks unlikely as the local coaches are still present
 
2 ways to look at this.

It's an opportunity for local coaches and players to learn from the overseas coaches.

or

The overseas coaches are taking the jobs of local coaches.
 
2 ways to look at this.

It's an opportunity for local coaches and players to learn from the overseas coaches.

or

The overseas coaches are taking the jobs of local coaches.

As I said where coaches can make a substantial difference is fielding but having watched the terrible fielding in the local T20 tournament, what difference have they made. We have has local coaches for 3 years and not one iota of difference
 
As I said where coaches can make a substantial difference is fielding but having watched the terrible fielding in the local T20 tournament, what difference have they made. We have has local coaches for 3 years and not one iota of difference

Remember the massive difference that Steve Rixon made to the national team.
 
I see this as a good trial for a foreign coach for an elevation to the national team level at some point.
 
Along with these two head coaches, four foreign coaches – Bilal Shafayat (Central Punjab), John Sadler (Sindh) will be fielding coaches and Richard Stonier (Central Punjab), Ian Fisher (Sindh) will be strength and conditioning coaches.

Ian Fisher, the former strength and conditioning coach, was one of 14 people summarily dismissed for signing a letter to the previous board which criticised the botched handling of the complaints raised by former player Azeem Rafiq.

Fisher’s case was settled after an employment tribunal ruled that the club did not follow a fair procedure and that he was unfairly dismissed on procedural grounds. The unfair dismissal of Fisher, pictured, followed those of second-team coach Ian Dews, academy director Richard Damms, fitness coach Pete Sim and HR manager Liz Neto, the latter having not signed the letter and whose case was separate to the rest.
 
Remember the massive difference that Steve Rixon made to the national team.

You need a technical director for fielding and then he teaches the local coaches. Our fielding can be improved with hard work, that means hours of practice, not 20min of basic fielding drills, which only scratch the surface. My son was a poor fielder, the county age groups told him he wasn't good enough, so for hours he practiced with an ex county pro. By the end of the same summer, his hands were as hard as leather and he had improved beyond recognition. The fielding practice from most of these coaches is a scam where no one is improved
 
I see this as a good trial for a foreign coach for an elevation to the national team level at some point.

Do you think our poisonous ex players would allow a Foreign coach? Personally i think he would make little difference, we just need more matches on better wickets and over time players will improve if they have the talent
 
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Great move by PCB, hope they can also select players on merit in the squad and get rid of dead, old and non-performing leeches..

Good to see the ground work has started, hopefully with a lead up to the national side..

Language is not barrier in these places, when a foreginer who doesnt entertain chamchas and just do work normally, the bar will be raised and becomes a norm.

Looking forward to Central and Sindh performances..

The foreign coaches proberly don't even know the names of the players before this tournament even started and expecting them to pick players on merit.
 
Need foreign coaches at all levels in our domestic cricket. Local coaches have failed us eternally. Foreign coaches will upgrade local standards.
 
This is excellent foreign coaches will definitely bring something new to table
 
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Need good foreign foreign coaches esp fast bowling coaches.These coaches can iron out any technical flaws of young fast bowlers.They can even help increase their pace.
 
Former England international cricketers and current coaches, Paul Nixon and Paul Franks, are a part of the Pakistan national team’s selection panel and both coaches were consulted before the announcement of Pakistan’s Test squad for the historic home series against England.

Both Nixon and Franks are a part of Pakistan’s domestic cricket and are serving as coaches of Sindh and Central Punjab respectively. Head coaches of the six provincial teams in Pakistan’s domestic structure serve as part of the 7-member panel of the national team selection committee, headed by former Pakistan cricketer, Mohammad Wasim.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), in a historic move, announced the former England internationals as the head coaches of two sides for the 2022/23 domestic season, which includes the National T20 Cup, Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, and Pakistan Cup.

Former England keeper, Nixon, has been a revelation for Sindh as he led them to the National T20 Cup title earlier in the year and followed it up with a fantastic run to the final of the recently concluded Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.

Nixon and Franks served as part of the selection committee for Pakistan’s Test series against England and will also serve as selectors for Pakistan’s upcoming home Test series against New Zealand.

The two-match Test series between Pakistan and New Zealand is set to commence on 27 December. The two-match Test series will be followed up by a three-match ODI series.

https://propakistani.pk/2022/12/13/...rt-of-pakistan-cricket-teams-selection-panel/
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">What an incredible 3 months in Pakistan with <a href="https://twitter.com/TheRealPCB?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@TheRealPCB</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/TheRealPCBMedia?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@TheRealPCBMedia</a> the Boys of Central Punjab have been amazing to work with and today it all came together <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PakistanCup?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PakistanCup</a> &#55357;&#56473;&#55356;&#57286;&#55357;&#56490;&#55356;&#57339;&#55357;&#56397;&#55356;&#57339; <a href="https://t.co/Jgd5xPjJ9Y">pic.twitter.com/Jgd5xPjJ9Y</a></p>— paul franks (@thegeneral_8) <a href="https://twitter.com/thegeneral_8/status/1609919472361672704?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 2, 2023</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
I'm not sure the foreign coaches experiment will continue under the new PCB regime.
 
I'm not sure the foreign coaches experiment will continue under the new PCB regime.

We saw a profound improvement in both Sindh and. Central Punjab this year, with Sindh making the QEA finals (Central Punjab just missing out) and CP then winning the Pakistan Cup. Along the way we saw players like Omair Bin Youssuf, Qasim Akram, Mohammed Umar and Saim Ayub further develop.

I agree that, with the intention of being different to the Rameez regime, these coaches won’t be back.

Further thing to note, given that there will be many more teams next year, with diluted low quality squads, who would they go to anyway? There is no Central Punjab and Sindh anymore next year.
 
I'm not sure the foreign coaches experiment will continue under the new PCB regime.

Yep, can't be having domestic coaches being good and leading the team to success. Gotta have your own yes men corrupt cronies in there to make money instead.
 
Imo, for a country on the brink of default, the business side matters more than the sports side.

  • How much more money does a winning team earn in bilateral series and tournaments?
  • In an ideal scenario, if bringing all these foreign experts starts a long winning streak for us, will the amount (locals are paid in rupees, foreigners in dollars) spent on them be offset by the earnings surplus over local coaches?
  • If we start winning all our matches and lose our reputation as a mercurial team, will the PCT team brand become more or less valuable?
 
The English adventure in Pakistan this winter did not end with Ben Stokes and his players celebrating a famous 3-0 Test clean sweep but rather last Monday, as Central Punjab beat Balochistan by 50 runs in Karachi to claim the domestic 50-over cup.

Central Punjab’s head coach is Nottinghamshire’s Paul Franks, with Bilal Shafayat, the county’s former batsman, his assistant. As the pair beamed at the success, three months of graft away from the spotlight and security bubble of England’s historic tour had been rewarded handsomely. “I can’t remember a dull day,” says Franks, back home and set for a return to pre-season at Trent Bridge on Monday, where he is assistant to Peter Moores. “Going into that final week with a chance of winning a competition, with all the hard work we had put in and having been away from family over Christmas, it made for a pretty special end to an amazing experience.

“I’ve never had a feeling like it in cricket, it was really different to winning trophies as a coach with Notts or Trent Rockets; it was more relief at seeing the hard work had borne fruit. For the players it was sheer elation.”

Franks and Shafayat were among a contingent of English support staff who signed up to work in Pakistan’s six-team domestic system. Their side went unbeaten in the four-day Quaid-e-Azam Trophy – albeit with 10 draws on unforgiving surfaces – before blossoming in the 50-over format by topping the group stage and tigerishly defending 254 in the final.

Known as the General at Notts, Franks is the type to divert praise to his troops and the news of maiden Pakistan call-ups for Tayyab Tahir, leading run-scorer in the competition, and Usama Mir, top wicket-taker, capped things off. “That’s a really strong message from Shahid Afridi and his selection panel, I really hope they can show what they’re all about,” he says.

The 43-year-old draws great personal satisfaction from a trip that concluded with a deluge of public praise from his victorious Central Punjab players on departure. Franks says: “I probably did things differently. We spent a lot of time together as a group, really getting to know each other and that maybe in the past hadn’t happened.

“As much as being head coach, you want to become a friend so they can trust you when a big decision or advice comes. There are always periods of play when you don’t feel in control but also times where you can see your input really show through – that’s the most satisfying thing, to go on the journey with the players.”

Shafayat’s input was also key. Franks insisted before the trip that the 38-year-old – known to England fans for his walk-on role in the 2009 Cardiff Ashes Test – was bringing more than just valuable fluency in Urdu, having spotted his potential when coaching Nottinghamshire’s second XI and age-group teams.

“I knew Bilal was highly skilled as a coach, so it was no surprise to me” says Franks. “His playing experience in Pakistan also gave me a real heads-up on what to expect. He’s a gem of a coach.”

And his own development? “We toured more of the country than most international sides and it was a trip that had challenges. If I learned one thing, it’s to manage the things that matter.”

This outlook was needed when, after a 12-day break at home in early December, Franks returned for the 50-over cup and a reaction to England’s dominance in the Test series was brewing in the corridors of power. It led to Ramiz Raja being ousted as chair of the Pakistan Cricket Board and wider regime change among Franks’ employers. On 23 December, with five games of the 50-over cup to go, there were even reports that all domestic coaches in Pakistan had been sacked before the expected restructure of the six-team system.

Franks says: “For 24 hours there was a lot of uncertainty among the squad not knowing if we’d still be here the next day. But the new regime told us they wanted to finish the season and together we got what we set out to achieve.”

And his own ambitions now, not least the role of Pakistan head coach that is expected to come up? “Ha, I think they may go for someone a bit more high profile. But I’m very grateful to the PCB for trusting me with the Central Punjab role, it was an amazing experience as a person and as a coach. The kindness of the players and people in Pakistan will stay with me forever.”

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...dds-to-english-success-story-pakistan-cricket
 
Brilliant guys

Thanks for giving us muhammad ali we saw his thunderbolts against England
 
Brilliant guys

Thanks for giving us muhammad ali we saw his thunderbolts against England

haha

I do wonder about the state and quality of domestic cricket in Pakistan and the level of players that are being produced.
 
Brilliant guys

Thanks for giving us muhammad ali we saw his thunderbolts against England

It shows the ignorance of you and others on what coaches do at that level. The only coach that can make a practical difference is the fielding coach.
 
haha

I do wonder about the state and quality of domestic cricket in Pakistan and the level of players that are being produced.

Apparently the problem is not the quality but not enough are playing FC. So these 300 cricketers aren't very good but the next layer has gems waiting to be unearthed.
 
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