May 21, 2005
So Greg Chappell
is India's new cricket coach. What I found most amazing in the weeks
leading up to selection day, was that there were murmurings from
various quarters about a foreign coach not being able to understand
Indian culture and adjust to our social milieu ... particularly strange
I'd say after an overseas man has just completed his term as one of
India's most successful coaches! Even more shocking was that a lot of
these misplaced ramblings were coming from the lone Indian in the race
for coach, Jimmy Amarnath. Surely he could've found a more appealing
USP than the swadeshi card!
At the end of the day though, one would have to say the
right choice has been made. Chappell not only brings with him a rare
depth of cricketing knowledge and acumen, he also appears to be a
shrewd, no-nonsense task master who will give his best and expect the
same from everyone else. He might just turn out to be the right man at
the right time for a team desperately needing a new way of looking at
things. It's also encouraging that the BCCI has signed him up for two
entire years (thankfully discarding their dreadful series-to-series
contract system) and he has been given the option of selecting his own
support staff. We must, however, guard against setting sky-high
expectations right from the outset, as is usually our wont. It would be
unfair to expect Chappell to brandish some sort of magic wand and
reverse the fortunes of Indian cricket. Efforts at a turn-around will
have to be multi-pronged -- the players, selectors and administrators
will have to contribute just as much as a coach. Harsha Bhogle had a
very pertinent point in a recent column of his, when he said that the
best teams in world cricket need not be the best coached, but are
almost always the best administered. Cricket Australia and England
Cricket Board, please take a bow. BCCI ... well ... umm ... err ... And
the same holds true for the rest of Indian sport. Every sports body in
the country is run like the personal fiefdom of some politician or
industrialist or worse a fatal combination of the two.
The truth quite frankly is that unless we completely overhaul the way we look at running sport in our country, we cannot hope to produce achievers at the international level. The best players and the best coach can only be step two and three in the process. We seem to have forgotten step one.