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The truth about Aussie cricket culture - By Mickey Arthur

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Read more at https://www.playersvoice.com.au/mickey-arthur-truth-about-aussie-cricket-culture/

The truth about Aussie cricket culture

Mickey Arthur - Contributor

Unfortunately, it was always going to end like this.

Despite generational change, independent reviews and too many behavioural spotfires to list, Cricket Australia and the national team had demonstrated no real willingness or desire to improve the culture within their organisation from season to season.

That could lead to only one conclusion.

An explosion.

A deterioration of standards that would culminate in an incident so bad, so ugly, that it would shame the leaders of the organisation into taking drastic action to change the culture or risk alienating fans, sponsors, broadcasters and other stakeholders.

It gives me no pleasure to say this. Indeed, for the period between 2011 and 2013 it was my job, as national team coach, to make the very changes I just mentioned were needed.

That I wasn’t able to advance that cause disappoints me. I am not for a moment saying I was blameless. There are decisions I would change if I had my time again. But there were other factors at play, factors that have long been associated with Australian cricket.

Factors that came to a head at Newlands.


THE PROBLEM WITH ‘THE LINE’

This is a sad day for the three players involved but, in many ways, it might ultimately be seen as a positive day for the Australian team and cricket generally.

It couldn’t keep going the way it had been.

I have been bitterly disappointed watching the Australian cricket team over the last few years. The behaviour has been boorish and arrogant. The way they’ve gone about their business hasn’t been good, and it hasn’t been good for a while.

I know what my Pakistani players were confronted with in Australia two summers ago. I heard some of the things said to the English players during the Ashes. It was scandalous. And I have seen many incidents like Nathan Lyon throwing the ball at AB de Villiers in this series.

There has been no need for the Australians to play this way.

They are wonderful cricketers. They haven’t needed to stoop to the depths they have to get results. They’re good enough to win cricket games with their skills and talents without being abusive and threatening their opposition.

It has reflected poorly on them and served only to injure the spirit of cricket and bring down the tone of this great game.

And I’ve hated this talk about ‘the line’. What is the line? Who sets it? Who dictates how it is enforced? It is totally different culture-to-culture, yet the Australians believe they’re the ones who should be setting it? That it’s OK to intimidate a person from another country, another culture during the day and be buddies with him afterwards? Nonsense.

The Aussies have played the victim when they deem the other team has overstepped the mark. And when they’ve been in the ascendancy and behaved badly, everything is OK because they have determined as much.

The line, whatever it is, has to be determined by the ICC and the laws must be abided by. It’s not for Lyon to ‘headbutt’ against.

I see very little in the way of personal responsibility within the Australian team. Cameron Bancroft and Steve Smith admitted what they had done at a press conference, but they didn’t have much choice. They had been caught red handed. And even then they didn’t come completely clean. They said they had used an adhesive tape on the ball when Cricket Australia’s own investigation ruled that it had been sandpaper.

Every other Test playing nation feels Australia looks down at them and I say this as someone who has coached two of them. I don’t know if this attitude is because the Aussies get paid more money – some of them earn in a Test what many of my Pakistani players earn in a year – or because they think they’re better cricketers, or that they live in a beautiful country with great facilities.

Whatever it is, it’s regrettable.

There was an article today in one of the UK newspapers with a headline stating, ‘David Warner is the most hated man in the most hated team in the world’. Today, that is 100% right. It’s a real pity. There isn’t a lot of sympathy around the cricket world for the Australians right now.

I get the sense that the Australian team felt like it had become untouchable. It was going to take something massive to change that. Now that has happened.

Having worked with the Aussies, I know they are generally good guys. I had a really good relationship with Davey Warner. He was a real project for me as coach. I thought he was past all this bulldust. And Steve Smith eats, breathes and sleeps cricket. He was very proud to have been leading Australia. Losing the captaincy will be devastating for him.

But I think the sanctions imposed, tough as they are, are the right ones. Cricket Australia needed to make a stand. These guys were the leaders. They were responsible for what transpired.

So here we are. A cultural issue that should’ve been addressed a long time ago wasn’t. It has all gone bang. And Smith, Warner and Cam Bancroft have been punished for it.


THE LESSONS OF HOMEWORK-GATE

I had seen Australian cricket from the outside, as coach of South Africa, and the inside, as coach of Western Australia, before taking over from Tim Nielsen in 2011.

I was aware of the cultural issues within the national team.

Those early Australian teams we came up against with the Proteas were some of the greatest of all time. They strutted around because they were never going to lose. Then we started winning and they entered a transition period, but the sense of entitlement remained unchanged.

I was appointed as head coach off the back of Australia’s home Ashes defeat in 2010-11 and the Argus review that followed.

I was an outsider – the first non-Australian to coach the national team – and I was commissioned to come in and try to change culture. Discipline had started to slip.

Ultimately, I wasn’t able to achieve that. I’m not exonerated of blame here. I could’ve handled things differently. The suspensions over ‘Homework-gate’ were probably excessive. I could’ve listened to more people. By the time I was sacked before the 2013 Ashes, it wasn’t working.

But there were other issues at play as well.

I’m Australian now, I’ve got my passport, but back then I wasn’t. I didn’t fit in. I hadn’t come through the Australian system and played 100 Tests. I wasn’t part of the old boys’ club.

I was told I didn’t understand the Australian way.

What I did understand was that successful teams are made up of very good individuals – good, solid characters – who pull in one direction and strive to attain the ultimate result together. You might have one or two difficult personalities, but you can manage those because the system doesn’t allow them to get away with too much.

Australia was different. The players, in many ways, were a law unto themselves. When I pushed hard on issues of culture, I was told by my superiors to back off. And when I softened my approach I was told to go in harder.

Parameters were never set and the goalposts kept moving. It was a challenging environment in which to try to reset the culture.

The warning signs were there from the start. Disrespect from the players towards support staff. Arriving late for team commitments. Moaning. It was always CA’s fault, or someone else’s. I used to say, ‘Guys, it’s time to look into the mirror. What you will see is not perfect. Consider that before you cast judgements on others.’

Homework-gate was an attempt at a line-in-the-sand moment.

The thing with Homework-gate was that there was no homework. We had lost the second Test against India and all we wanted from our players were three sentences of self-assessment. ‘Coach, I need more spin bowlers in my nets,’ or, ‘Coach, I need to work on my sweep shot,’ or, ‘I need to work on my defence out of the rough.’

The purpose of sourcing this information was to structure our training sessions around what the players wanted to make sure they were in the best possible space for the third Test.

Four guys didn’t submit their answers. In hindsight, suspending them was probably too harsh. The punishment didn’t fit the crime. But, at that point in time, I was sick and tired at having to constantly harp on about our culture, attitude and professionalism.

I ran the risk as head coach of potentially losing four players, or losing the captain and my support staff, all of whom were unanimous in saying we needed to take a stand on this issue. Ultimately, I made the decision and, if I had my time again, I probably would have made a different one.

When you strip it all back, however, it was an attempt to reboot the team’s attitude and culture. ‘We’ll be right, we’ll rock up to nets and we’ll be fine. We’re the Australian cricket team.’ It was letting us down and it needed to change.

To me, the episode was a microcosm of a problem that remains with the Australian team to this day: the sense of entitlement among the players.


REPAIRING THE DAMAGE

The final straw for my coaching tenure with Australia was Davey Warner punching Joe Root at the Walkabout pub in Birmingham during the Champions Trophy.

I didn’t find out about the incident until two days after it happened, and only then because of a disagreement between two players in regards to our fines committee.

I won’t retell the story – it’s all been reported many times – other than to say I phoned James Sutherland the night I learned of what happened.

He castigated me for not knowing about it earlier. I was like, ‘How the hell am I supposed to know about it if no one tells me? I’m not hanging around the Walkabout at 1am.’

In frustration I said something along the lines of, ‘Do you want me to carry on holding their hands or take action?’

I was out of a job shortly after.

I wasn’t happy with how it was all handled at the time, but I am at peace with it now. James, Pat Howard and I still catch up from time-to-time.

Darren Lehmann was brought into replace me. I’ve got a lot of admiration for Darren. I think he’s a damn fine coach. But the impression I got was, at a period in time where they could’ve been addressing the broader issue of team culture, Cricket Australia were instead intent on bringing in an Aussie knockabout for beers at the bar at 6pm, telling stories about yesteryear, everyone sitting around the campfire and having a laugh and going to bed happy.

It was going to be hard to make meaningful change in that environment.

I’ll admit that I was bitterly disappointed when I watched the ball tampering incident on television. Again, these guys are good blokes.

They’re not villains. That the culture within the team led them to believe this was an acceptable course of action is the great pity of this whole, sorry saga.

Every team I have coached has tried to get the ball to reverse swing. But they do it legally. I have been amazed in Pakistan at how skilful the players are in this regard. The difference between tampering the ball and shining the ball is huge. I have never seen any object on a cricket field being used to alter the condition. That’s taking it way too far.

The Aussies didn’t need to do this, but they did. It’s the result of an issue that had been festering away and should’ve been addressed a long time ago. It was always going to end this way. An incident like this had to happen for the necessary cultural shift to take place.

Australian cricket has been in an ivory tower for too long. They had to take decisive action. If they didn’t, things would inevitably return to the way they had been and another major incident would’ve been inevitable.

The job to repair the damage to the Australian cricket brand is underway.

By doing so, Cricket Australia might just improve the tone and standard of the way the game is played around the world.
 
Looks like Mickey Arthur agrees with the decisions. Anyways, he shouldn't be worrying too much about a bunch of disgraceful cheats
 
Coach Saab :ma rubbing it in for his own humiliation in Homework Gate :ashwin

Some good points on perception of AUS team around the cricketing world.

Agree 100% with UK newspaper headlines:

David Warner is the most hated man in the most hated team in the world
 
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Micky Paji not letting it slip past him :))

I think Mickey has tried very hard to blame the Aussie culture for this ball tampering debacle directly. I, however believe that Aussie culture is related to it only indirectly because no matter which cricketing culture you come out of, its plain black and white that cheating is wrong. To believe that Aussie culture made them believe it is acceptable to cheat is stretching it too far.

What Aussie culture might be doing is making them believe that their arrogance is justified and that they are indeed untouchable superstars. It has instilled in them an exaggerated sense of confidence that they cannot fail at anything. Some of the players have translated it into believing that they have an impeccable ability to cheat and not get caught. They thought they are too good to get caught.

The prevelant Aussie cricketing culture didnt tell them it was okay to cheat, it gave them the confidence to cheat. These are two different things which need to be understood.
 
Damn Micky not mincing words here :aag :aag :)) :))

Loved this part!

Every team I have coached has tried to get the ball to reverse swing. But they do it legally. I have been amazed in Pakistan at how skilful the players are in this regard. The difference between tampering the ball and shining the ball is huge.

Haters can.........:asad2
 
Kick a man when he's down....
 
An excellent article. Australia's on-field behaviour was in need of changing even before the ball tampering scandal.
 
Bit of a pointless nothing article.

The Australian culture and the aggressive sledging and what not are completely different things to the ball tampering imo.
 
Great article by Micky.

There isn’t a lot of sympathy around the cricket world for the Australians right now.

....apart from on PP.... :inzi

Every team I have coached has tried to get the ball to reverse swing. But they do it legally. I have been amazed in Pakistan at how skilful the players are in this regard. The difference between tampering the ball and shining the ball is huge.

Ooooo that statement is gonna sting a few posters on here. The posters from the "every team ball tampers despite the ball being followed around the ground by cameras during every international match" brigade :yk2
 
Mickey Arthur should tread very carefully before going all guns blazing...does he realize which team he is coaching? :))

Jokes apart seems more like a vendetta piece.
 
Damn Micky not mincing words here :aag :aag :)) :))

Loved this part!



Haters can.........:asad2

LOL they wonder why the outfields in Pakistan arent lush and green like how they are in Aus, NZ, Eng etc. The outfields are one of the main reason our boys can get one side scratched of the ball when throwing balls in and backing up .
 
Played a part in a CT winning side. Helped develop Babar,Shadab,Hassan,and Fakhar.
Yea he waved his magic wand and they appeared

I guess PSL had no role in their discovery
 
Former Australia coach Mickey Arthur said he expected Steve Smith to recover from the ball-tampering scandal which has left him with a lengthy ban – but added that he wasn't so sure about co-conspirator David Warner.

Arthur, now coach of Pakistan, also told AFP that behaviour had sunk to "abysmal" levels in world cricket and needed rapid improvement, after a series of flare-ups in recent months.

Smith and Warner, Australia's captain and vice-captain, were banned for 12 months for a ball-tampering incident in South Africa also involving Cameron Bancroft, who was suspended for nine months.

It has been a dramatic fall for Smith, 28, who was being compared with the legendary Donald Bradman just a few months ago but who broke down in tears during an apology on Thursday.

"I feel desperately sorry for Smith. I know he eats, sleeps and drinks cricket," said Arthur.

"He loves cricket and everything he did. He loved the job, he was passionate about the job. I think he was a very good leader and an unbelievable cricketer."

However, Arthur wondered whether there would be a way back for Warner, who has been blamed for hatching the plot and has cut an isolated figure as the scandal unfolded.

The 31-year-old batsman, who has issued a statement admitting responsibility for the incident, is due to face media for the first time on Saturday.

"I definitely see the return of Smith, without a doubt. He will be there, he will serve his time, he will train hard and he will come back stronger," Arthur said.

"Davey Warner, I am not a hundred percent sure."

'ABOVE EVERYBODY ELSE'

Arthur, who was sacked as Australian coach in June 2013 after just 19 months in charge, said he had been concerned about the team's behaviour for some time.

The South African tried to address Australia's culture when he banned four players for failing to complete a "homework" assignment, but then fell out with Cricket Australia.

"I have been disappointed at the behaviour of the Australian team over a last couple of years, to be honest," Arthur said.

"I think that they felt they are almost above everybody else so that's been disappointing because they are a good enough cricket team, they are skilled enough cricketers to win games without resorting to the kind of tactics they have."

He added: "I am disappointed for the knock that Australian cricket is taking at the moment and world cricket in general, so it's a disappointing and sad time for world cricket."

But Arthur also said the "reality check", which comes after a number of untoward incidents on the South Africa tour, could do Australia some good.

"They need to play hard but they need to play fair. The verbal sledging and we have seen scuffles in tunnels and faux pas on the field and now the ball-tampering, and I think that has just gone a little bit too far," he said.

"I think this is a reality check for them and hopefully it does Australian cricket some good and they rebound back from it, because the cricket world needs Australia fit and firing because they are a hell of a good team when they are."

BROKEN WINDOW, SCUFFLES

The International Cricket Council has announced a review into player behaviour and the spirit of the game, with chief executive David Richardson warning "cricket is itself in danger".

During Australia's tour of South Africa, Warner had to be restrained during an angry confrontation with Quinton de Kock, and South African bowler Kagiso Rabada was charged for brushing shoulders with Smith.

Australia's Nathan Lyon was also fined for dropping the ball next to a sprawling AB de Villiers. There were also a number of flashpoints during last month's tri-series between Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and India.

"I think over the last few months the behaviour has been abysmal in international cricket," Arthur said.

"We have seen Bangladesh captain (Shakib Al Hasan) calling players off the field, we have seen Bangladesh breaking a window in the dressing room, we have seen dances on the ground," said Arthur, referring to the tri-series.

"We have seen tunnel scuffles (between Warner and de Kock), we have seen Rabada... we have seen a ball dropped on AB de Villiers's head, so I think behaviours certainly need to be addressed."

https://www.supersport.com/cricket/more-cricket/news/180330/Arthur_backs_Smith_to_come_back_stronger
 
Yea he waved his magic wand and they appeared

I guess PSL had no role in their discovery

Lol man give it a rest, your opinion loses credibility if you attack someone regardless if they are right or wrong.
 
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