"Gone are the days that guys would come into the team and sit in their comfort zones": Mickey Arthur

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"Gone are the days that guys would come into the team and sit in their comfort zones": Mickey Arthur

Pakistan's Head Coach Mickey Arthur has wasted no time in reinforcing his credentials as a top professional in his field by guiding the team through a successful tour of England and ten successive wins in their last ten matches which also saw them take the number one spot in the ICC Test rankings.

In an exclusive interview with PakPassion.net, Arthur spoke about the mutual respect he has built with his interactions with Pakistan players, his passion to see Pakistan succeed in all forms of cricket, his views on Umar Akmal and Babar Azam and how he intends to improve Pakistan's fortunes in One-Day cricket.



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PakPassion.net : Has the absence of a regular bowling coach been a hindrance to Pakistan’s progress in recent times?

Mickey Arthur : The Pakistan team’s performance has not been affected by the absence of a bowling coach as I am very proficient around this aspect of coaching. Technically speaking, we know where our players are at and what is expected of them. The players have been on individual bowling plans and we have been monitoring them day-in and day-out. What it has done is dilute my role a bit which is a little tough on me as I couldn't get to some of the other things that I would like to have done. That is because I have been taking more care of the bowlers but all-in-all it hasn’t been a major issue and we have managed well so far.


PakPassion.net : You seem to have found great respect amongst the Pakistan players who consider you more as a mentor and guide.

Mickey Arthur : I am starting to build really good relationships with the players. They are a wonderful bunch of guys and very talented cricketers as well. We are starting to build a good relationship with each other but that doesn’t mean I am soft or tough in anyway; I just call it as I see it. I am honest with them and that is how I feel you develop good relationships. I don’t like to sugar coat anything, I will tell the players exactly as it is and how I see it. These Pakistani cricketers work very hard and they are wonderful and really good cricketers and I am developing a close bond with them. It’s all about trust. When you start off, you feel each other out and get to know where the boundaries are and you see which buttons you can push and what you can’t. I think we have got through that stage and have started to develop some seriously good relationships now.


PakPassion.net : What is the most difficult part of dealing with Pakistan players?

Mickey Arthur : There is absolutely nothing difficult at all in working with Pakistan cricketers. I just feel that it’s all about being brutally and totally honest with them. As I have always said that wherever I have worked before, I have encouraged the players to talk to me about anything and not just cricket. Once we are down to that level of relationship, then you know that you have become that mentor type of person to the players. I believe I am at that level now and I have good relationships with the players now and that is pretty heartening for me.


PakPassion.net : Are there any generic weaknesses in the players that you would like to work with and iron out?

Mickey Arthur : No, I don’t think so at all. I think they have just got to believe that they are as good as they actually are. One thing that I have noticed is that the Pakistan boys are very humble and soft individuals. I guess, I have come from a pretty tough school where the soft get eaten a lot and I am pretty keen to see them toughen up a little and give back what they get and stand their ground which they are doing now.


PakPassion.net : Did taking over a well gelled and cohesive playing unit, especially in Tests, help in your task when you took charge as head coach?

Mickey Arthur : That was definitely the case. Misbah has been outstanding with the work he has done with the team as has my predecessor Waqar Younis who did a great job with the Test team. The Test team I inherited was left to me in a very good state. But, I don’t like just keeping it in a good state, I believe in continually improving ourselves and in continuing to improve our product. That is my role. So, I am constantly challenged and trying to improve each of the players five or ten percent better and if we can do that, we get five or ten percent more output which will make them a formidable unit.

I am also enjoying working with the One-Day team as our white ball cricket needs a lot of work. We have changed the brand of our One-Day game where we are having the guys play a more expansive game. They have taken that on-board and are working extremely hard and that seems to be working out nicely as well.


PakPassion.net : Television pictures showed you extremely frustrated during the recently concluded series against England. Is that something we can expect more of during your tenure?

Mickey Arthur : Yes, that is how I am. I wear my heart on the sleeve and I certainly don’t beat around the bush and hide things in these matters. Coming to those television pictures, yes, I was extremely frustrated during the ODI series in England. For example, at Headingley in the fourth ODI, we were just one wicket away from getting a result that would have given us confidence in the brand of cricket that we wanted to play. If you look at where we started in Southampton in the first ODI and where we finished in Cardiff, there was a lot of work which went in there. So, at Headingley we were keen to get over the line as that reinforces the brand of cricket we want to play and the work we are putting in. I was very keen to see us do that and was immensely frustrated for several reasons. I wanted to solidify what we had been doing and I wanted the guys to get confidence out of that. As you know I have been vocal about the fact that fitness and fielding are the two biggest challenges that Pakistan face. I get very excited when the West Indies management tell me that this is the fittest Pakistan team they have ever seen. But I do know that we have some way to go in terms of achieving higher standards.

When we are not finishing off games because we are not fit enough or strong enough to do that then I do get frustrated and vent my feelings as we saw. I always say that batting and bowling are not measurable as some guy may get out for nought or you may bowl your best ball and get hit for four. Fielding and fitness, we can measure and those are non-negotiable. Gone are the days when you could be rocking up to the team and be not fit. Gone are the days that guys would come into the team and sit in their comfort zones. We are now setting up proper standards and these are comparable to most international teams around the world. We cannot rely just on skill any more. Skill will only get you so far.


PakPassion.net : You had a chance to see Umar Akmal up close during the recently concluded Limited-Overs series against the West Indies. What are your impressions of him as a player?

Mickey Arthur : First and foremost, I will say that Umar Akmal is a fantastic player. I feel that Umar Akmal plays the brand of cricket that we want to play in One-Dayers and Twenty20 cricket. He is the type of guy who can come in and take the game by the scruff of the neck and get a forty in twenty-five balls. We didn’t have guys in that position before. So, I think he can play. However, he like every other player knows that there are standards to be adhered to. One must conform to those standards or you won’t get another chance.

In my first dealings with Umar Akmal when he came into our setup recently I found that he trained hard and well. Yes, you have got to keep watching over Umar’s shoulders all the time or he tends to wander a little bit, but he showed everything during that time that I wanted to see from a Pakistan player. I do have a slight regret, if you can call that, and this applies to Umar and Mohammad Rizwan as well. It is that we saw Umar at number five in the IT20s and Rizwan at number six in ODIs but because we played so well in those games, we didn’t get to see them under pressure or they didn’t get a proper opportunity. That’s all good and I am not complaining as such but I would have liked to see them play as that would have helped in push their careers on a bit.


PakPassion.net : There have been some murmurs about a possible conflict of interest in terms of you being a coach for Pakistan and the PSL side Karachi Kings. How do you respond to that?

Mickey Arthur : There is no truth in that at all and let me put a few things on the table on this issue. Before I signed the contract with Pakistan I was contracted to be with the Karachi Kings for the whole season. So, talking purely commercially, that was my contract arrangement with Pakistan that I could work with Karachi Kings as well and financially speaking, that was good for me. In terms of any conflict of interest, I am way more professional for people to think that I am going to be favouring anybody from Karachi Kings or anyone else in my Pakistan role. I am certainly too professional to ever contemplate that. I, therefore, am going to knock any such notion on the head straightaway.

The really positive thing in this arrangement is that it allows me to see all the best young Pakistan players up close. If I wasn’t involved in the PSL and was sitting at home or watching television during that period, then I wouldn’t get to see these young guys in action up close. For me this is not only a great opportunity to see the young talent of Pakistan but also to work with these players. I think this is a win-win situation for everyone and in my opinion there is certainly no conflict of interest involved.


PakPassion.net : Have you any concerns about Babar Azam’s ability to cope with the pressure of Test matches and in specific his weakness against the short-ball?

Mickey Arthur : Let me start by saying that Babar Azam is a very good player. I can understand the trials and tribulations of any young guy coming into the game. He will get a few short-balls and if he plays one or two poorly then suddenly everyone claims that he can’t play the short-ball. Babar is good enough to deal with that and we will be continually working with him to resolve that problem. In fact, we are all over that as coaching staff. That’s not an issue and he will find his way around that and he is good enough to do that. Technically speaking, I am not worried about that at all. Every young player coming into the game gets an examination by the short-ball at some stage or another and he must go through it and he will either sink or swim. Let me say again that Babar is good enough to come through that and I have no concerns about him at all.


PakPassion.net : Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan are heading towards the end of their international careers, are you worried about suitable replacements for them?

Mickey Arthur : Well in terms of our future planning, Babar Azam is a big part of that. But there are also the likes of Mohammad Rizwan, Umar Akmal, Shan Masood, Mohammad Hafeez and even Sharjeel Khan who I feel has a technique which is good enough for Test cricket as well. We have all of those guys who are waiting in the wings. Of course, we hope that Misbah and Younis will be around for a little while yet but we as support staff and in my role as head coach, will be grooming the next guys so that the transition will be seamless whenever the two leave. Hopefully, they won’t leave together and will leave at different times. That has not been spoken about and been left to the future.


PakPassion.net : How important is the presence of these two senior batsmen for the younger batsmen?

Mickey Arthur : The younger batsmen do learn a lot from Misbah and Younis. Not only are they the most experienced and our best batsmen, they are the two fittest guys in the squad by a long way. They lead the charts in terms of fitness. It’s not only what they do with the bat for us but it’s the way they train and prepare and the way they go about their business which makes them wonderful role models. For our younger players like the Babar Azams, the Sami Aslams as well as Mohammad Nawazs, to be sitting and watching how these guys go about their business is simply great.


PakPassion.net : Do you have any plans to talk or work with Pakistani domestic coaches in order to help them better prepare future players for the senior team?

Mickey Arthur : That is my plan without a doubt. We will get around to that. The fact is that we have such a busy schedule until the Champions Trophy next year. But there will come a time when this will happen. I have always said that I am thoroughly enjoying this role and hopefully I will be around for some time yet. I will always like people to think of me in terms of my legacy where I came in and set up proper standards and structures, gave back something to the local coaches and left Pakistan cricket in a far better state.


PakPassion.net : What are the biggest challenges for you in terms of improving the fortunes of our One-Day side?

Mickey Arthur : The biggest challenges are to continually keep improving and building confidence in our game plans and the brand we want to play. You can only do that when you get a little bit of success because success breeds confidence and that in turn gives you further good results. The whole pecking order must be in the right way, I guess and it is; I feel it is developing in that way and in quick time as well. But what we cannot do is to rest on our laurels and we need to keep solidifying what needs to be done in order to succeed in the future.


PakPassion.net : You will be heading to Australia soon and should Pakistan do well there, will there be an element of a “gloat factor” given your past experience there?

Mickey Arthur : No, I don’t think so. To be honest this is the first time I have been asked this question and I have been thinking how I will answer this question when it does come up. That trip is certainly not about me but it’s about Pakistan’s tour of Australia. I will be doing what I can to prepare the Pakistan team as well as I can to get good results there. I certainly won’t be gloating if we do well; I will be going about my business as normal.
 
Really impressed with the way he spoke to me about his passion for Pakistan cricket. I do hope he gets all the support he needs from the PCB and takes Pakistan to greater heights.
 
Really impressed with the way he spoke to me about his passion for Pakistan cricket. I do hope he gets all the support he needs from the PCB and takes Pakistan to greater heights.

Mickey must have some jazba junoon if even MIG bhai is impressed with his passion :)

Great interview. Been so impressed with Mickey ever since he took over.
 
The most fascinating question - and comforting response - was the question about succession planning for the retirements of Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan.

It was obvious that Babar Azam would replace one of them. No surprises there.

But the three other options put forward were Mohammad Hafeez (which is obviously a furphy, as he is too old to do so), Mohammad Rizwan and Umar Akmal.

I'm absolutely clear that Umar Akmal is the most talented option. And this is the first indication that he is right up there in terms of consideration.
 
The most fascinating question - and comforting response - was the question about succession planning for the retirements of Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan.

It was obvious that Babar Azam would replace one of them. No surprises there.

But the three other options put forward were Mohammad Hafeez (which is obviously a furphy, as he is too old to do so), Mohammad Rizwan and Umar Akmal.

I'm absolutely clear that Umar Akmal is the most talented option. And this is the first indication that he is right up there in terms of consideration.

But also note that Mickey does talk about his attitude issues. So its not a myth.
 
But also note that Mickey does talk about his attitude issues. So its not a myth.

Sure. I have no argument with that.

Mickey Arthur says that you have to keep watching Umar Akmal over his shoulder or he starts to wander off a little bit.

In other words, he's like a kid with ADHD who gets distracted and does silly things, not malicious things.

That's really common in sport. Think of Gazza in football or Ian Botham or Freddie Flintoff or Ben Stokes.

Really good captains like Mike Brearley or Michael Vaughan or coaches like Terry Venables or Sir Bobby Robson manage such players very easily. A big arm around them and expressions of support tend to create a situation in which the players trust their coach or skipper and take note when they give them a kick up the backside.

This is Gazza when Sir Bobby Robson - who once famously described him as "as daft as a brush" - died.


I totally accept the issues that exist with Umar Akmal. But I think that a father figure coach could salvage the career of Pakistan's most talented batsman.

And I really hope that that coach is Mickey Arthur.

Let me just remind you, Shane Watson flushed Mitchell Johnson's head down a toilet at the Australian academy as youngsters. Yet as Mickey Arthur discovered, they became the closest of friends. There is footage on YouTube with a very naughty title of the young Watson behaving towards Chris Gayle and others like a spoilt brat.

But players grow up. And I'd love for Arthur to be the man who helps Umar Akmal to mature and deliver.
 
Nice interview.

PakPassion.net : What is the most difficult part of dealing with Pakistan players?

Mickey Arthur : There is absolutely nothing difficult at all in working with Pakistan cricketers. I just feel that it’s all about being brutally and totally honest with them.

He should count his lucky stars that Akmal, Shehzad and Maqsood are not around... And when Akmal was there for a little bit he was on a tight leash
 
A very professional and intelligent coach. Pcb did well to get him. Can find weakness in players and seems a though he won't take nonsense from anyone.

He knows what he wants from his team. Honestly can't wait till he is in full control of the test team which will be when Misbah retires.

Pcb should be patient with him and allow him to do his job. Judging from this interview you can see he enjoys being a part of the Pakistan set up and it's key that he's involved in psl for the reasons he's mentioned himself in this interview. Shows his commitment,someone like Trevor Baylis doesn't watch 1st class cricket but Mickey bhai is doing everything in his power to learn about our players and study them.
 
Nice interview.



He should count his lucky stars that Akmal, Shehzad and Maqsood are not around... And when Akmal was there for a little bit he was on a tight leash

Are there any documented discipline problems with Sohaib Maqsood? He has poor fitness and comes across as a bit lazy, but I don't think coaches have complained about his discipline, correct me if I'm wrong.
 
Really impressed with the way he spoke to me about his passion for Pakistan cricket. I do hope he gets all the support he needs from the PCB and takes Pakistan to greater heights.

Some fantastic questions asked by the PP team and that's a very good response from mickey.
 
Are there any documented discipline problems with Sohaib Maqsood? He has poor fitness and comes across as a bit lazy, but I don't think coaches have complained about his discipline, correct me if I'm wrong.

there were rumors of him not following team management orders but i guess no where as freqent as the other 2 heroes
 
I like that he is pushing Sharjeel and Umar to be in test team, he is probably the sole reason Sharjeel is selected for NZ test. Otherwise Misbah and Waqar will not selected him in million years. And he would not have let Umar dropped from the test team five years ago...

Culture of test team also need to change too, players like Sarfraz and Wahab had effect the working of test team and won many matches for us in last two years, infact Pakistan starts winning in Asia (not drawing all the time) since we had Sarfraz, Yasir and Wahab.

In test we need a major strategy change in the way we use our fast bowlers, roles are not defined or they are defined in very limited scale. Plus they need to be pushed to bowl fast in second/third spell and bowl attacking rather than defensive lengths, not to mention focus on reverse swing as main weapon in Asia. Waqar took 250+ wickets in Asia, by soley focusing on reverse swing, reverse swing and bowling fast has to be the core strategy... In Misbah's era run of the mill bowlers Chema, Imran type bowlers were playing without any challenge... This is where I think Misbah's brand has damaged Pakistani brand :(
 
The most fascinating question - and comforting response - was the question about succession planning for the retirements of Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan.

It was obvious that Babar Azam would replace one of them. No surprises there.

But the three other options put forward were Mohammad Hafeez (which is obviously a furphy, as he is too old to do so), Mohammad Rizwan and Umar Akmal.

I'm absolutely clear that Umar Akmal is the most talented option. And this is the first indication that he is right up there in terms of consideration.
Haris is the other option when he returns.
 
Well in terms of our future planning, Babar Azam is a big part of that. But there are also the likes of Mohammad Rizwan, Umar Akmal, Shan Masood, Mohammad Hafeez and even Sharjeel Khan who I feel has a technique which is good enough for Test cricket as well. We have all of those guys who are waiting in the wings.
.

somehow it seems that either he don't agree with our PP analysts so he include Hafeez and Shan Masood in his list or this answer is just a political answer.
 
I like Mickey Arthur. He has even gotten results out of Afridi. He was the coach of the South African domestic side in 2003 when Afridi represented them, Afridi scored 90 plus runs as opener in one of the games on a seaming wicket including playing out a maiden from Pollock.
 
Mickey Arthur clears the air about Babar Azam’s short-ball problems

Pakistan head coach Mickey Arthur believes middle-order batsman Babar Azam is good enough to find his way around the short-ball and said that every young player, in his early cricketing career, has to learn to face bouncers.

“Let me start by saying that Babar Azam is a very good player,” said Arthur. “I can understand the trials and tribulations of any young guy coming into the game. He will get a few short-balls and if he plays one or two poorly then suddenly everyone claims that he can’t play the short-ball. Babar is good enough to deal with that and we will be continually working with him to resolve that problem. In fact, we are all over that as coaching staff.”

He added: “Babar will find his way around that and he is good enough to do that. Technically speaking, I am not worried about that at all. Every young player coming into the game gets an examination by the short-ball at some stage or another and he must go through it and he will either sink or swim. Let me say again that Babar is good enough to come through that and I have no concerns about him at all.”

On Umar Akmal

The South African talked about middle-order batsman Umar Akmal’s batting prowess which he deems is up to the modern standards.

“First and foremost, I will say that Umar is a fantastic player,” said Arthur. “I feel that Umar plays the brand of cricket that we want to play in ODIs and T20Is. He is the type of guy who can come in and take the game by the scruff of the neck and get a forty in twenty-five balls. We didn’t have guys in that position before. So, I think he can play.”

He added: “However, he, like every other player, knows that there are standards to be adhered to. One must conform to those standards or you won’t get another chance.”

‘Difficulties faced= none’

The 48-year-old thinks Pakistani players are easiest to work with but one needs to be brutally honest with them in order for them to learn and develop their respective roles in the team.

“There is absolutely nothing difficult at all in working with Pakistani cricketers,” said Arthur. “I just feel that it’s all about being brutally and totally honest with them. As I have always said that wherever I have worked before, I have encouraged the players to talk to me about anything and not just cricket.”

“Once we are down to that level of relationship, then you know that you have become that mentor type of person to the players. I believe I am at that level now and I have good relationships with the players now and that is pretty heartening for me.”

On Pakistan’s tour to Australia

Pakistan have recently concluded their series against West Indies and they will be travelling to Australia in December after a short Test series against New Zealand in November.

Arthur previously coached Australia and their conglomeration didn’t end on the right note. However, when asked if he would be looking forward to beat Australia with Pakistan and then gloat about it, Arthur said the trip will not be about him.

“To be honest this is the first time I have been asked this question and I have been thinking how I will answer this question when it does come up,” he said. “That trip is certainly not about me but it’s about Pakistan’s tour of Australia. I will be doing what I can to prepare the Pakistan team as well as I can to get good results there. I certainly won’t be gloating if we do well; I will be going about my business as normal.”

‘Wake-up call before NZ’

Mickey Arthur said his team had been given a wake-up call for their tours of New Zealand and Australia after they became the West Indies’ first Test victims in 18 months.

Pakistan had already clinched the series by winning the first two Tests, but Kraigg Brathwaite’s heroics earned a much-needed consolation victory for the West Indies.

“It is a wake-up call,” Arthur told AFP. “Hopefully that gives the shock to the players they needed before our tough tours to New Zealand and Australia.”

West Indies won the third and final Test by five wickets in Sharjah on Thursday after they dismissed Pakistan for below-par totals of 282 and 208.

Brathwaite guided his team to their first victory in 14 Tests as he became the first opener in Test history to carry his bat in both innings, compiling unbeaten scores of 142 and 60.

Pakistan will now play two Tests in New Zealand, the first in Christchurch starting from 17 November and the second in Hamilton from 25 November.

Pakistan then move on to Australia for a three-Test series, starting with a day-night match in Brisbane from 15 December.

“It’s a good wake-up call and just says that if you’re off your discipline in international cricket at any time you can be beaten,” said Arthur. “We certainly took the pedal off the accelerator in this game and were below in standards and intensity,” he added.

Arthur also warned Pakistan could expect a tough tour, starting with New Zealand who will look to hit back hard after being routed 3-0 in India last month.

“Any team in their conditions is extremely hard to play,” said Arthur.

Mickey Arthur was interviewed by PakPassion.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/1220643/mickey-arthur-clears-air-babar-azams-short-ball-problems/
 
Quality wise, why pp s interview are much better than those that were under big professional banners?
 
Quality wise, why pp s interview are much better than those that were under big professional banners?

Simply speaking - we cheat! We listen to what you guys are discussing and then ask those questions and then sit patiently and listen to the answers. There is no time limit on a commercial break or need to cover what Afridi is wearing today etc

Its purely about cricket and if our interviewees have the time to talk about cricket, we will sit for ages listening and then transcribing what they say.
 
I will say that Umar Akmal is a fantastic player. I feel that Umar Akmal plays the brand of cricket that we want to play in One-Dayers and Twenty20 cricket.

So, does that mean he will bat at no. 3 or 4, especially in T20's? In the recent domestic T20 and PSL, he was batting at primarily numbers 3 and 4, which resulted in him being the highest run getter.

As for ODI's, he can score a 50 from a position of 10-2 or 10-3, but he will struggle to chase down 30 runs off 34 balls. He will score runs at no. 6, but doesn't have the match awareness to be a finisher. Currently, there doesn't seem to be space at no. 3 or 4 in ODI's, so I guess he should wait for his turn.
 
So, does that mean he will bat at no. 3 or 4, especially in T20's? In the recent domestic T20 and PSL, he was batting at primarily numbers 3 and 4, which resulted in him being the highest run getter.

As for ODI's, he can score a 50 from a position of 10-2 or 10-3, but he will struggle to chase down 30 runs off 34 balls. He will score runs at no. 6, but doesn't have the match awareness to be a finisher. Currently, there doesn't seem to be space at no. 3 or 4 in ODI's, so I guess he should wait for his turn.

He should open the innings with Sharjeel
 
He should open the innings with Sharjeel

He isn't an opener and was originally a middle order batsman, so he should bat at no. 3 or 4 and just look at the success he is getting domestically, especially in T20's.
 
Quality wise, why pp s interview are much better than those that were under big professional banners?

Our interviews are for cricket enthusiasts. We plan our questions and try to ask questions that our readers want to know the answers to.

No gimmicks, no nonsense.
 
Well Mickey sahib please pay attention to our pathetic tail that can't score 30 runs between them. In today's Cricket the tail needs to more then wag, top teams after seven regularly score about a 100 runs at least between them. For us, the likes of Wahab and Amir are absolutely pathetic with the bat.
 
Wow. Great interview. I admire Arthur's attitude towards Pakistan Cricket Team. I've got a feeling this time, our team will perform exceptionally against NZ and Australia.

Thanks PP.
 
Well Mickey sahib please pay attention to our pathetic tail that can't score 30 runs between them. In today's Cricket the tail needs to more then wag, top teams after seven regularly score about a 100 runs at least between them. For us, the likes of Wahab and Amir are absolutely pathetic with the bat.

You will have to wait until Misbah retires for this.

If you have followed Arthur's career or read his book, you will know that he has a very precise model for Test team selection:


5 batsmen
1 batting all-rounder who can bowl fast-medium (Kallis, Stokes, Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood, Corey Anderson, Mitch Marsh, Shane Watson et al)
1 wicketkeeper-batsman
1 fast bowling all-rounder averaging over 20 with the bat (Philander, Johnson, Malcolm Marshall)
1 spinner who can bat
2 fast bowlers who may not be able to bat

Misbah just plain disagrees. He wants the top four bowlers but bowls them in longer spells (so the quicks get tired). And he negotiates away the "third, fourth and fifth bowler who can bat" in favour of a sixth specialist batsman.
 
Glad he said and realises that players need to toughen up on the field
 
Pakistan Head Coach Mickey Arthur believes that the controversial Umar Akmal has got the talents but needs to conform to the set standards, like any other player in order to maintain his slot in the team.

“I will say that Umar Akmal is a fantastic player. I feel that Umar Akmal plays the brand of cricket that we want to play in One-Dayers and Twenty20 cricket. He is the type of guy who can come in and take the game by the scruff of the neck and get a forty in twenty-five balls,” said Mickey Arthur in an interview to PakPassion.net

“However, he like every other player knows that there are standards to be adhered to. One must conform to those standards or you won’t get another chance,” the outspoken coach added.

Umar Akmal has always been the talking point since his international entry, once considered Pakistan replacement to India’s Kohli, Akmal’s career was marred with disciplinary issues and scandals on and off the field.

Arthur however noted that Akmal has been working hard since his take over the reins,

“I found that he trained hard and well. Yes, you have got to keep watching over Umar’s shoulders all the time or he tends to wander a little bit, but he showed everything during that time that I wanted to see from a Pakistan player.”

Arthur does regret that playing down the order Akmal alongside Rizwan had not got the much needed opportunity to express themselves recently.

Arthur noted for his outspoken nature was not pleased when Pakistan lost the third Test match against West Indies in Sharjah, calling it “a wake-up call," as Pakistan heads Down Under to face New Zealand and more importantly the Australians, reported AFP.

http://www.brecorder.com/sports/cricket/326563-umar-akmal-is-‘fantastic’-hails-arthur.html
 
Pakistan’s head coach, Mickey Arthur praised Pakistani cricketers after the successful run against West Indies and said that they are a wonderful bunch of boys and are great cricketers as well.

Arthur talked to Pak Passion and said, “I am starting to build really good relationships with the players. They are a wonderful bunch of guys and very talented cricketers as well.”

He shared building up relationship with players and being honest with them.

“We are starting to build a good relationship with each other but that doesn’t mean I am soft or tough in anyway; I just call it as I see it. I am honest with them and that is how I feel you develop good relationships. I don’t like to sugar coat anything, I will tell the players exactly as it is and how I see it.

“These Pakistani cricketers work very hard and they are wonderful and really good cricketers and I am developing a close bond with them. It’s all about trust. When you start off, you feel each other out and get to know where the boundaries are and you see which buttons you can push and what you can’t. I think we have got through that stage and have started to develop some seriously good relationships now.”

He hailed the character of Pakistani cricketers and told that he is trying to bring them to a comfort zone where they can share anything with the coach.

“There is absolutely nothing difficult at all in working with Pakistan cricketers. I just feel that it’s all about being brutally and totally honest with them.

“As I have always said that wherever I have worked before, I have encouraged the players to talk to me about anything and not just cricket. Once we are down to that level of relationship, then you know that you have become that mentor type of person to the players. I believe I am at that level now and I have good relationships with the players now and that is pretty heartening for me.”

Mickey Arthur further called Pakistani cricketers as humble and soft. He advised them to believe on their abilities.

“I think they have just got to believe that they are as good as they actually are. One thing that I have noticed is that the Pakistan boys are very humble and soft individuals,” he said.

He also urged players to toughen up themselves, “I guess, I have come from a pretty tough school where the soft get eaten a lot and I am pretty keen to see them toughen up a little and give back what they get and stand their ground which they are doing now.”

http://arysports.tv/mickey-arthur-praises-pakistani-cricketers/
 
Great read, provides some good insight into MA's thought process and his preferences etc. Some may criticise him for making changes but the changes he's making are crucial to our future.
 
You will have to wait until Misbah retires for this.

If you have followed Arthur's career or read his book, you will know that he has a very precise model for Test team selection:


5 batsmen
1 batting all-rounder who can bowl fast-medium (Kallis, Stokes, Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood, Corey Anderson, Mitch Marsh, Shane Watson et al)
1 wicketkeeper-batsman
1 fast bowling all-rounder averaging over 20 with the bat (Philander, Johnson, Malcolm Marshall)
1 spinner who can bat
2 fast bowlers who may not be able to bat

Misbah just plain disagrees. He wants the top four bowlers but bowls them in longer spells (so the quicks get tired). And he negotiates away the "third, fourth and fifth bowler who can bat" in favour of a sixth specialist batsman.

I don't see how waiting for Misbah's retirement will solve our short batting line up. I am not aware of Mickey's tactics at all. If what you say is true then we don't have a batting all rounder or spinner who can bat. Yasir Shah is worse then a tail ender. Looking at old scorecard's Imran Khan normally batted at number 7 followed by Wasim Bari who was half decent with the bat at 8. After him the likes of Qadir were capable of getting a twenty as well. Now we have the average Sarfaraz at six, it's to high in the batting order for him. After that the likes of Wahab and Amir don't do anything with the bat at all, that's the problem. Unless we plan to wait for a batting all rounder or spinner who can bat should play six batsmen, keeper Sarfaraz at seven then four bowlers. Our batting line up always seems so short to me compared to other teams. We are currently playing with five and a half batsmen.
 
You will have to wait until Misbah retires for this.

If you have followed Arthur's career or read his book, you will know that he has a very precise model for Test team selection:


5 batsmen
1 batting all-rounder who can bowl fast-medium (Kallis, Stokes, Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood, Corey Anderson, Mitch Marsh, Shane Watson et al)
1 wicketkeeper-batsman
1 fast bowling all-rounder averaging over 20 with the bat (Philander, Johnson, Malcolm Marshall)
1 spinner who can bat
2 fast bowlers who may not be able to bat

Misbah just plain disagrees. He wants the top four bowlers but bowls them in longer spells (so the quicks get tired). And he negotiates away the "third, fourth and fifth bowler who can bat" in favour of a sixth specialist batsman.

Only hammad azam and umer amin fits in to that spot for a test team.... hammad's FC avg for a bowling allrounder is excellent he avgs 20 with the ball and 30 with the bat why the selectors cant see... I have seen him swing/seam the white ball even in UAE, would have been a surprise package for this NZL series.... he deserves a selection....

umer amin is also there if they need a 110-120 kph bowler just to rest and rotate the pace guns...


But for both bowlers the keeper should stand up and near to the stumps, if he stands like he do for amir and wahab these bowlers can get carted all around the part effortlessly...

having said all this MISBAH is not a captain for part-timers or allrounders unless they are like wicket taking as pre-ban Hafeez..
 
Player's like Afridi made a career out of being in his comfort zone. It was almost impossible to leave him out even if he has been performing so poorly.
 
We did ask the same question...

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sp...s/news-story/4b85bf16fb0b592f218ba1a35664b5e3

MICKEY Arthur could extract the sweetest of revenge on the people who sacked him as Australian coach.

Should Arthur’s Pakistan side follow South Africa’s lead and triumph in Australia this summer, he may ironically bring about the axing of those who unceremoniously shoved him out the door three years ago.

Arthur’s messy split with Cricket Australia culminated in a wrongful dismissal compensation case at the Fair Work Commission in Sydney back in 2013 after James Sutherland and Pat Howard had given him his marching orders and ushered in Darren Lehmann as coach on the eve of an Ashes series.

Lehmann had nothing to do with Arthur’s ousting and in fact felt uncomfortable about the circumstances surrounding his appointment, however, the three-pronged power base with Howard and Sutherland is now under threat.

If Australia were to lose two series in the one home summer for the first time in its 140-year Test history, heads would almost certainly have to roll.

The board is holding fire on knee-jerk reactions for now, and were rocked by Rod Marsh’s sudden resignation.


Mickey Arthur and Ricky Ponting in 2012. Picture: Phil Hillyard
They are due to meet again on December 8, a week before the Pakistan Test series gets underway, but frank and earnest discussions are already taking place behind the scenes about potential changes to Australian cricket.

At the moment it’s the playing XI that is set for the first transformation, but that doesn’t mean the focus won’t eventually shift to the men pulling the strings.

Former Test opener Ed Cowan who played on the infamous Homeworkgate tour of India that marked the beginning of Arthur’s demise, told Fox Sports that Australia is experiencing a bigger crisis now than it did even then.

“This is as bad as it gets,” Cowan said. “This is the darkest day that I can remember.”

CA punted Arthur claiming he did not resolve disciplinary issues and declining standards in the team and allegedly did not understand “the Australian way.”

Team culture might have since improved, but Australia is in no less of a mire now than they were back then, following the five humiliating losses on the trot that descended to a new low in Hobart.

Lehmann’s simple approach has proven successful when the team has momentum, as evidenced by the Ashes whitewash in 2013-14 and the triumph in the World Cup. But when the going gets tough there are concerns over the coach’s management and ability to come up with answers.

Howard has called on Lehmann to “reinvent” himself as coach, and Lehmann has accepted the challenge.


Current captain Steve Smith and coach Darren Lehmann at Blundstone Arena. Picture: NIKKI DAVIS-JONES
“You’re always trying to change as coach and get better,” said Lehmann.

“Right now you’re challenged as a coach aren’t you, because we’re not getting the results we need.

“You have to think of different ways to get the best out of our group of players, that’s for all our coaching staff and players – we have to get better.”

Sutherland has admitted the roles of key personnel will have to be examined.

Arthur’s primary focus at the moment is on a series against New Zealand in Christchurch that had its first day abandoned due to rain yesterday, but he has already admitted that a rematch against his former employers Australia is one he is keenly anticipating.

“Call it unfinished business internationally I guess, I have a little bit of that,” Arthur told The Daily Telegraph at the time of his Pakistan appointment earlier this year.

“It’s exciting, it really is.

“I’d be lying if I didn’t say I don’t think about it, I certainly do and I watch Australian cricket with a lot of interest because some of the young players playing there.

“I’m a far better coach having gone through the experience of Australia. I hate the word Homeworkgate, and that whole issue. Would I have done it again? Maybe, maybe not, but I certainly learnt a massive amount out of the whole experience.”
 
I am hoping that Mickey is giving some straight talk to a few in the team
 
2 losses in consecutive Tests would have badly shaken Arthur. Lets see how he can rally his troops.
 
Arthur's biggest test coming up now and we're coming off 3 straight losses. Huge performance required by Pakistan to avoid defeat.
 
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