Mickey Arthur. Pic Credits: X

ENG vs PAK : Former Pakistan Coach And Team Director Mickey Arthur Criticizes Former Pakistan Chairman Zaka Ashraf For Changing Scenarios In Pakistan Cricket

Spread the love

It was a smoggy Wednesday afternoon in November, and Mickey Arthur was puzzled. He stood on a balcony at Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium, the headquarters of the Pakistan Cricket Board. Mickey Arthur  had been speaking to the PCB’s Cricket Operations Director Usman Wahla, discussing logistics ahead of Pakistan’s Test tour of Australia in December. He’d been asked to wait after a meeting with the chairman had broken for a recess, and he couldn’t understand what was taking so long.
Most of the cricketing world’s focus, even in Pakistan, wasn’t on Lahore. It was World Cup semifinal day, and New Zealand were giving India a bit of a scare in a tall chase, with Daryl Mitchell and Kane Williamson’s entertaining partnership ensuring the game in Mumbai would be a contest rather than preparation for a coronation. In Pakistan cricket, however, a storm was brewing, and attention would soon shift from Mumbai to Lahore.
 Mickey Arthur was at the Gaddafi for a performance review called for by the PCB management committee head Zaka Ashraf  following Pakistan’s relatively underwhelming World Cup campaign; they were knocked out at the group stage with four wins and five defeats. Arthur, Pakistan’s team director, was already looking ahead, focusing on a high-profile three-Test tour of Australia, a country where Pakistan had lost every Test they had played since 1995.

Mickey Arthur’s second stint with Pakistan as Team director since his winning the prestigious ICC Champions Trophy 2017

 Mickey Arthur, who is currently two years into a four-year contract with Derbyshire, was pursued by Ashraf’s predecessor Najam Sethi, who wanted him in as head coach.
“It was a stable job. I had a really good contract. I couldn’t just drop this and do Pakistan. That goes against my grain. And I told Najam that,”
The PCB and Arthur eventually worked out on a deal  where Arthur continued with his job at Derbyshire while appointing a team to work with him as team director. It meant he wasn’t around for a significant chunk of his time with Pakistan cricket, especially during the English county season.
“I used to wake up early. I used to be up at 5.30 in the morning. I would do all my correspondence until 7.30, then get into Derbyshire, do our day, while being available on the phone through the day. And then when I got home I would sit with Grant over Zoom, and we’d plan out what the next block of days looked like for the Pakistan team. So I was spending a lot of time daily with Pakistan when I wasn’t there too,”
Either way, Arthur joined the team part-way through the Asia Cup, and was with Pakistan for the entirety of their World Cup campaign. There was no clash with the England domestic season during Pakistan’s tours of Australia and New Zealand, and he was slated to be with the team throughout those tours when the decision was made.
With their complete coaching staff including 2017 Champions Trophy winning coach Mickey Arthur , who returned to his second string as Director for the World Cup 2023 had a dismal and torrid time as the Pakistan team under Babar Azam in the conditions similar to their own backyard in India exited in the round robin matches itself finishing 5th with only 4 wins to their name.

The most shocking was Pakistan lost to Afghanistan team which created huge ruckus amongst the team as well and it was evident that travel from Mumbai to Lahore wont be an easy travel for Mickey Arthur and company of bowling coaches like Morne Morkel and and supporting staff with the likes of  Grant Bradburn .

In his first interview since his exit, former Pakistani coach and Director Mickey Arthur discusses his final days in charge, and his worries about Pakistan cricket’s future and strong comments on former Pakistan director Zaka Ashraf.

Former Pakistan coach and Team director Mickey Arthur criticizes Former Pakistan Chairman Zaka Ashraf for changing scenarios in Pakistan cricket

Former Pakistan team director, Mickey Arthur, recently spoke about the events leading up to his exit, effectively ending his association with the Men in Green.

Arthur’s second stint with the Pakistan cricket team was carried out in a rather unorthodox fashion, as he was also simultaneously contracted to the Derbyshire county in England. Former Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman, Najam Sethi, was quite insistent on having Mickey Arthur on board to assist former head coach Grant Bradburn as well as the players.

While the veteran coach’s first stint was glittered with a rise in ranking across formats as well as the 2017 Champions Trophy title, his second and most recent spell with the team was a forgettable affair. Pakistan failed to qualify for the finals of the 2023 Asia Cup and finished fifth in the 2023 ODI World Cup in India.

In November 2023, the PCB conducted a review meeting where the coaching staff had to present their findings over the team’s inability to qualify for the knockout stages of the World Cup and speak about the poor performances in general.

“The whole review was just a charade. I would have had a bit more respect for Zaka if he’d said it straight out. The way I realised the whole thing was a charade was Mohammad Hafeez was already sitting at the PCB offices,” Mickey Arthur said in an interview with ESPN Cricinfo.

“I got a little whisper in my ear that Zaka wanted to see me in a separate office in the museum at the HPC [High Performance Centre]. I went in, he asked me a whole lot of questions and then he said, ‘look, we’re going to remove the whole support staff and captain, basically, and that was it’,” Arthur added.

Mohammad Hafeez was the team director like Mickey Arthur- Zaka Ashraf

Former Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman, Zaka Ashraf, opened up about the radical decision to part ways with the entire coaching staff. The likes of Mickey Arthur, Grant Bradburn and Andrew Puttick were replaced by Mohammad Hafeez, Adam Hollioake, Saeed Ajmal, and Umar Gul  ahead of Pakistan’s tours of Australia and New Zealand.

“Hafeez was the team director like Mickey and had to manage things, which he did in a professional way. At critical situations during international tours, Mickey had to fly and he had refused to join Pakistan because of his contract with Derbyshire county. He was basically coaching online. I have all my respect for him, but how can you do coaching on Zoom?” Zaka Ashraf told ESPN Cricinfo.
Zaka Ashraf resigned from his position as the Chairman of Management Committee in January 2024, and has been replaced by Mohsin Naqvi as PCB Chairman.

Mohammad Hafeez’s stint as team director has witnessed quite a rough start after Pakistan suffered a 0-3 whitewash at the hands of Australia away from home, and lost the five match T20I series against New Zealand by a 1-4 margin as well.

You can’t just reassign the team director, head coach and batting coach of the national team- Exclaims Mickey Arthur post his tenure

Instead of completely ousting the overseas coaching contingent off their contracts, the PCB announced that Arthur and Co. were given roles within the framework at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore. However, it was not long before the trio decided to put in their respective resignations and part ways with the PCB for good.

“The PCB said we would be reassigned, but that was impossible. You can’t reassign people who have signed contracts. You can’t just reassign the team director, head coach and batting coach of the national team. That was a charade to get rid of us,” the veteran coach said.

The constant change in structure within the PCB and the coaching staff hampering is Pakistan cricket which will serve them no good with the marquee T20I tournament in sights few months down the lane in June 2024.

Also Read: WPL 2024: “My Gameplan Is Going To Be The Same”- Kashvee Gautam Excited Ahead Of WPL 2024 Marquee Tournament


Spread the love

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *