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HOME | SPORTS | DIARY | MARTIN CROWE |
October 8, 1999
NEWS
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![]() Motivation is the keyMartin Crowe
There was a time when a coach was a conveyance to get to the next game. Then a period followed when a coach was appointed to cricket teams to help with the many tasks of readying a side for international fixtures. When I was first made captain of New Zealand I had the good fortune to be aligned with Warren Lees, a former player of vast experience and knowledge who, as a teacher, also knew how to impart these to his charges. Warren and I had daily conferences and our innovative tactics in the 1992 World Cup are well documented. The gist of it was that Warren looked after players and media while I concentrated on field performances and direction. This worked well because we each had strengths that were properly utilised. Let's put it this way. I may have been concerned with the actual play, perhaps even my own contribution, so Warren would deflect the "pestering" media. Or a player needed massaging, maybe through some decision of mine, and Warren would be at once the pacifier and the motivator.
The key of Kapil’s is the combination he forges with Tendulkar. Surely that would have been checked out before the appointment. I bet Sachin said: "I want Kapil" and that would have been the end of the matter. The probability is that Kapil and Sachin will work extremely well together. Tendulkar is a very street-wise cricketer. He knows the right moves instinctively, so Kapil can be sure that the tactical side is in good hands. Kapil can advise but not direct, something a cricket coach should never attempt anyway. It is interesting that he is denied two early requests: to be a selector, and to see the players' workload reduced a little. At this stage he can only recommend, but I expect that the extra authority will come when and if he can claim results. Lees never became a selector. It enabled Warren to pacify and mentor the players without that barrier of power vested in a selector. Kapil Dev may not be a very experienced coach but I sense he will be a very effective mentor. Maybe, the Indian Board are smart in not appointing him as an official selector. It will be a changed scenario from the Gaekwad period that worked well, from all accounts. Anshuman was always a gentleman, soft-spoken but authoritative, yet one wondered whether he was assertive enough to steer the players into positive mode. The World Cup was an example, for India played with astonishing inconsistency. Would Kapil Dev have been able to arrest that dreaded slide when the batsmen choked and presented Zimbabwe with a gift win by 3 runs? We will never know. But only in time will we find out if Kapil can help India achieve the consistency that has eluded them for quite some time now. (Gameplan)
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