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Party time part 2!
This!hopefully Steve Waugh puts his hand up and gets involved somehow
hopefully Steve Waugh puts his hand up and gets involved somehow
the guy has success here too, he was at the helm when South Africa last toured here and gave Australia their first series defeat on home soil in 17 years.I wouldn't rule out a South African coach, Mickey Arthur?
Punter was just about a selector, he had a big say in selections
Having a say and being a selector are two different things. Bit hard to have total faith in your captain when you know he was the guy that didn't pick you last test match or tour etc etc. It's just a burden a new captain of a struggling side doesn't need.Punter was just about a selector, he had a big say in selections
Dont like the idea of the captain being a selector. Has a great possibilty of causing issues within the team imo.
I wouldn't rule out a South African coach, Mickey Arthur?the guy has success here too, he was at the helm when South Africa last toured here and gave Australia their first series defeat on home soil in 17 years.
He also has proven success as a national coach helping Saffas to world number one ranking
SourceSouth Africa's most successful mentor, Mickey Arthur, says he'd consider Australia's head coach role
- By Malcolm Conn
- The Sunday Telegraph
- August 21, 2011
Australia have the ideal opportunity to become the best Test nation again by following the lead of India and England and appointing an African coach.
South Africa's most successful mentor, Mickey Arthur, is the ideal candidate to fill the new, expanded head-coaching role recommended in the sweeping Argus review delivered on Friday.
Now coach of Western Australia, Arthur made it clear that he would consider the position and has ambitions to return to international cricket.
"Yes, I would be foolish not be interested, but at the moment my priority is Western Australia," Arthur said.
"I have ambitions to continue coaching at international, however I have unfinished business here (in WA)."
Another interested party is dual World Cup winner and former Sri Lanka coach Tom Moody.
"I'd be very interested in looking to see where I could fit in, if at all," Moody told Fox Sports.
"I have certainly made no decisions personally on what I'm going to do."
Tim Nielsen has been told to reapply for his position despite being awarded a three-year contract before last summer's Ashes debacle.
Nielsen will continue as coach on the current tour of Sri Lanka and has become a selector, along with captain Michael Clarke, as part of a revamped five-man panel.
However, Nielsen's tenure may be short-lived, with review chairman Don Argus recommending that a new coach, general manager of team performance and full-time chairman of selectors be put in place before the South African tour.
Australia will play two Twenty20 matches, three one-day games and two Tests in South Africa from mid-October to late November.
Given Arthur's deep knowledge of South Africa's players and conditions that would appear an ideal place for him to start.
India became the No. 1 Test nation under South Africa's Gary Kirsten for almost two years and nowEngland are top dog with Zimbabwean Andy Flower at the helm.
South Africa were in worse shape than Australia when Arthur took over as coach in 2005. Ranked fifth in Test cricket and sixth in the one-day game, Arthur took the Proteas to No.1 in both forms of the game.
His demeanour as a genial man with a big smile hides the steely resolve of someone prepared to make tough decisions and give players an honest assessment, no matter how brutal it may be.
There is a feeling within the Australian cricket hierarchy that Nielsen has not been tough enough at times.
It is also telling that Michael Clarke's first coach at NSW, Steve Rixon, who also coached New Zealand, has come on board under the new captain's regime.
While it may seem odd on the surface to appoint a former wicket-keeper as fielding coach, Rixon's expertise will be invaluable around a team still in transition.
Arthur's strength is best highlighted by his decision to sack fast bowler Makhaya Ntini after his long career began to fade.
Already forced to walk through a minefield in the politically difficult South Africa, the dumping of Ntini created a maelstrom for Arthur when the paceman claimed racial discrimination.
Australia have never had an overseas coach.
The position was created in the mid-1980s and first held by Bobby Simpson before being filled by Geoff Marsh, John Buchanan and now Nielsen.
However, other countries have looked elsewhere for some time. Steve Rixon, Geoff Marsh, Greg Chappell, Geoff Lawson, Dav Whatmore, John Dyson, Tom Moody, Trevor Bayliss, Jamie Siddons and Stuart Law are among Australians who have coached overseas.