Wednesday, 27 April 2011

India appoint Duncan Fletcher as national cricket coach

World Cup winners India have appointed former England boss Duncan Fletcher as coach on a two-year contract.


The 62-year-old succeeds South African Gary Kirsten and becomes their fourth successive foreign coach.
Fletcher won a record eight consecutive Tests for England in 2004 before guiding the team to a long overdue Ashes success in 2005.
England coach Andy Flower was the Indian board's first choice but he was unwilling to uproot his family.
Former New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming, now coaching Indian Premier League side Chennai Super Kings, was another possible.
But it is thought Flower, also from Zimbabwe, was always reluctant having settled in England. Fleming was viewed as a long shot, and had publicly distanced himself from the role.
Michael Vaughan, the former England captain who formed a close bond with Fletcher during their most successful period, tweeted: "Great coach who will work well with [India captain Mahendra] Dhoni.
"Duncan will work well with all the talent. His biggest challenge will come from the media. He has never really understood how it works."
 Fletcher has recently acted as a batting consultant for South Africa Fletcher's first major assignment with India, the number one Test side, will come when they tour England from mid-July for the summer's eagerly-awaited tour. It features Tests at Lord's, Trent Bridge, Edgbaston and The Oval, plus one Twenty20 international and five one-day internationals.
Leading up to that is an Indian tour of West Indies in June, featuring one Twenty20 international, five one-day internationals and three Tests. Fletcher may not be involved in that.
"He may not join the team in the West Indies as he has some prior commitments," Board of Control for Cricket in India secretary N Srinivasan said.
New Zealander's former Test captain John Wright was the first man from overseas to take the job regarded as the most heavily scrutinised in cricket.
Wright was in the post between 2000 and 2005 before ex-Australia skipper Greg Chappell took over for two years.
After the 2007 World Cup, India had no full-time coach, relying on specialist bowling and fielding coaches instead. That ended when Kirsten, a former South African batsman closely mentored by Fletcher at Western Province, took over in March 2008.
Fletcher is known for picking players on hunches rather than on statistical achievements - a notable example being the highly successful Somerset opener Marcus Trescothick.
But he is also someone known not to suffer fools gladly and Graeme Swann famously made only one appearance under his regime, Fletcher feeling the off-spinner was a loose cannon.
Eric Simons, who was India's bowling coach during Kirsten's tenure, will continue in his role and is likely to enjoy a good relationship with Fletcher through their Western Province links.

Source link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/13205909.stm

No comments:

Post a Comment