The Phnom Penh Post

Aussie chief quits over Test crisis

- Robert Smith

AUSTR ALI A’S chairman of selectors Rod Marsh quit with immediate effect yesterday af ter a run of five heav y Test defeats left the team in crisis, say ing t hat it was time for “some fresh thinking”.

The former wicketkeep­ing great, 69, stepped down amid recriminat­ions about the poorly performing team which crashed to a third straight home series defeat to South Africa on Tuesday.

“This is my own decision and no one within Cricket Austra lia has pressured me or even suggested that I should do this,” Marsh said in a statement.

Cricket Australia said it would hold an extraordin­ary meeting later yesterday to decide on an interim replacemen­t, with an announceme­nt “in due course”.

Marsh, one of several leading cricket officials under intense pressure, had previ- ously insisted he would see out his contract which runs to the middle of next year.

But yesterday he said it was time for a new perspectiv­e after a run of defeats which has prompted severe criticism in Australian media.

“Clearly . . . it is time for some fresh thinking, just as it is for our Test team to welcome some new faces as we build for the future,” Marsh said.

“I have always had the best interests of Australian cricket foremost in my heart, and that’s why I have made this decision.”

Australia’s four-man selection panel now consists of Mark Waugh, Trevor Hohns and coach Darren Lehmann.

The panel has been under heavy scrutiny over the shocking results of Steve Smith’s national team, culminatin­g in their latest batting collapse of eight for 32 in their innings and 80 runs defeat to the Proteas in Hobart this week.

Lehmann declared only four players – captain Smith, Da- vid Warner, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood – were sure to keep their places after Australia’s second demoralisi­ng collapse in the Hobart Test.

Stormy series

Only hours before Marsh’s announceme­nt, Cricket Australia chief James Sutherland voiced support for him to see out his contract.

“He said he will finish up June and we will make decisions about where and how we transition to that in the future,” Sutherland told reporters in Hobart.

Former Test fast bowler Jason Gillespie and former Test captain Rick y Ponting have both been touted as possible successors.

Austra lia’s team announceme­nt for next week’s third and final day-night Test in Adelaide has been delayed until Sunday so selectors can assess players’ form in domestic Sheffield Shield matches.

It has been a stormy series for the Australian­s, starting with a stunning first innings collapse of 10 for 86 in the first Test in Perth, when Australia squandered a 158-run opening stand to surrender meekly to the Proteas by 177 runs.

Critics pointed to other recent dark days in Australian cricket, including their demolition for 60 by England at Trent Bridge last year.

Australia now face being whitewashe­d in a home series for the first time in their history if they lose to the Proteas in Adelaide.

The last time they lost six straight Tests – against India and England in 2013 – the coach at the time, Mickey Arthur, was sacked.

Sut herland earlier yesterday told reporters t hat he would not be stepping down from his post as t he chief executive of Cricket Austra lia, a position he has held for t he past 15 years.

Marsh, who replaced the previous chairman of selectors John Inverarity in May 2014, played 96 Tests from 1970 to 1984, taking a then record of 355 dismissals as wicketkeep­er.

 ?? SAEED KHAN/AFP ?? Australian chairman of selectors Rod Marsh has resigned after a run of five heavy Test defeats left the team in crisis, saying that it was time for ‘some fresh thinking’.
SAEED KHAN/AFP Australian chairman of selectors Rod Marsh has resigned after a run of five heavy Test defeats left the team in crisis, saying that it was time for ‘some fresh thinking’.

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