The Chronicle

Coffee and mediation on menu for Langer and support staff

- BEN HORNE

JUSTIN Langer has continued the peace process in his fractured relationsh­ip with Australian cricket by having breakfast with team staff members in Perth.

Langer was seen having coffees with members of the Australian support staff on Sunday, although it is understood there were no players or coaches present.

The meeting came as former Australian captain Mark Taylor urged the former coach and others involved in the ongoing saga to unite to put the game first.

“The only thing I would say to Justin or to players or administra­tors in general, is I’d like to see everyone just think a little bit more about Australian cricket ... before they make comment,”

Taylor said on Channel 9.

“I don’t mean Cricket Australia. I mean Australian cricket.

“Because it doesn’t damage the brand irreparabl­y, but it’s not great for the brand of Australian cricket.

“Let’s have a bit more positivity around Australian cricket and a little bit less talk around individual brands, and a bit more about the team brand or the nation brand.”

Langer wrote in his column for the West Australian that he still regarded players as his “friends” and “younger brothers”.

“This rubbish dialogue of me fighting with the current team must stop. Simply because it is not true. They are my friends. They are like my younger brothers. Anything said to the contrary is false,” he wrote in the West Australian.

“For four years we drank, ate, celebrated, strategise­d and lived together.

“We fought back from ‘sandpaper gate’ and Covid together, and we won the T20 World Cup and Ashes together.

“Was it always perfect? No, it wasn’t. What business, what team is always perfect? I have never met a leader who is every single person’s cup of tea. Again, that’s life.”

Mitchell Starc confirmed that the Australian team addressed the Langer sideshow at a team meeting before training on Saturday in Perth where they vowed not to let it become a distractio­n.

Privately there was a resolve from captain Pat Cummins and players to embrace the crowd and the Test, sign autographs and to focus on putting the game first – regardless of what reception they might receive from the outside.

Fast bowler Josh Hazlewood said players were only focused on what was being said inside the four walls of the change room.

“I didn’t give it one second of my day really. I don’t read hardly any media. Any of the papers. I’m not really fussed with any of what the commentato­rs, or past players or JL have to say really,” Hazlewood said.

“It’s just about what’s inside these walls with this group and I obviously wouldn’t know what he says or how often he says it, I’ve got no time for it all.

“I think a lot of the players are probably in the same boat, they don’t give it the time of day and are just focused on what’s coming up. There might be a couple of players who read into it a bit, but it doesn’t fuss me at all.”

 ?? ?? Justin Langer.
Justin Langer.

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