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No curfew for our 'grown men': Darren Lehmann

giri26

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Darren Lehmann, the Australian coach, says he can’t envisage ever slapping a curfew on his players, who were “grown men”, after England opted to ban their team being out after midnight.

The England decision followed Jonny Bairstow’s headbutt on Cameron Bancroft, the Australian opener, in a Perth bar late last month, which only came to light over the weekend.

It came with sensitivity within the England camp about off-field behaviour after the controversy surrounding Ben Stokes, the suspended star allrounder who is facing a police inquiry into a fight outside a Bristol nightclub in September

Lehmann said it was not something he would consider. “We wouldn’t have curfews but that’s our decision and that (having them) is theirs,” he told reporters in Adelaide late on Tuesday (November 28), ahead of the second Test starting on Saturday.

“We have faith in the blokes to do the right thing. They’re grown men, they’re adults.”

Greg Chappell, the former Australian captain and selector, suggested curfews were ineffective.

“If someone is determined to get out and do silly things, they’re probably going to do it, whether there’s a curfew or not,” he told Melbourne radio station SEN.

“Curfews are pretty useless really. If you treat people like adults, most of them will behave like adults. Those who don’t probably don’t last very long.”

Andrew Strauss, the England cricket chief, was quoted on Tuesday as saying there was no drinking culture in his team, but he imposed a midnight curfew on the five-Test Ashes tour regardless.

In laying down the law after the Bairstow incident, he said his players “need to be smarter”.

“That’s the reality, they are adults, intelligent adults, and at times they are not using that intelligence in the right way,” he said. “It is a distraction to the team and none of us want that distraction.”

Despite the Stokes controversy and the Bairstow incident, Strauss insisted the team were “good, honest, hardworking cricketers”.

“They’ve done some great things in an England shirt and I will back them on that to the hilt because I know them,” he said.

http://www.wisdenindia.com/cricket-news/curfew-grown-men-lehmann/280485
 
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Ooooh! Australians now tasting blood! England better win the 2nd or might as well pack their bags and head home. Humiliation beckons with open arms
 
I think the curfew is the wrong message, if a player does not adhere to the curfew what will they do ban him. So you end up with a player being banned for staying out until 1am on his day off and Bairstow gets nothing for starting the whole fiasco. Don't punish the rest of the players for something Bairstow has done.
 
I think the curfew is the wrong message, if a player does not adhere to the curfew what will they do ban him. So you end up with a player being banned for staying out until 1am on his day off and Bairstow gets nothing for starting the whole fiasco. Don't punish the rest of the players for something Bairstow has done.

no curfew will stop a player head-butting another!
 
Agree that curfews aren't useful. Professional cricketers should not be acting like idiots, end of. Trust should be put in them.
 
Oh wow. WE MEN, THEY BOYS. Ironic it's about a culture and life where his MEN play a game for a living.

Lehmann always came across to me as someone's embarrassing uncle/grandad.

Begging ex-players to help his men play spin before BANG/IND tour, yelling black cLInt at the SL dressing room because he was run out [and a racist], and bragging that he doesn't believe in homework for players [nothing inherently wrong with teaching beloved manbabies]. Just crass unprofessionalism to denigrate another coach you replaced.

Let the bats and balls do the talking, coach.
 
I think the curfew is the wrong message, if a player does not adhere to the curfew what will they do ban him. So you end up with a player being banned for staying out until 1am on his day off and Bairstow gets nothing for starting the whole fiasco. Don't punish the rest of the players for something Bairstow has done.

The bigger issue is that Strauss has basically sided with the Aussie media over the English players and this will destroy morale.

What he should have said is "My players have done nothing wrong and we don't care what the Aussie media thinks".

Instead he's berated them for not meeting the impossible goal of avoiding negative press coverage from the Aussie media.
 
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