Stabroek News

Pakistan coach Arthur plots demise of former team Australia

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MELBOURNE, (Reuters) The merry-go-round of coaching jobs in internatio­nal cricket inevitably leads to awkward reunions but few could be more thorny than Mickey Arthur’s encounter with his old team Australia.

Three years after being sacked as the side’s head coach, the South African will hope to guide Pakistan to a breakthrou­gh test series win Down Under, with the first match starting in Brisbane on Thursday.

Coaches rarely get to choose the manner of their exit but Arthur’s dismissal was especially acrimoniou­s, and the trigger for a high-profile severance claim against his former employers Cricket Australia.

He was less than two years into the post when his tenure began to unravel during the 2013 tour of India where Michael Clarke’s team were whitewashe­d 4-0.

Four players were stood down for a test during the infamous ‘homework-gate’ scandal and months later, opening batsman David Warner punched England’s Joe Root at a bar on a boozy night out during the Champions Trophy tournament in London.

With team discipline appearing in complete disarray, Arthur was dismissed three weeks before the Ashes and replaced by Darren Lehmann, who remains Australia’s coach.

A resident of Perth for over six years, Arthur said he felt no extra motivation in beating the home side.

“We just want to win every test series we play,” the 48year-old told local media in Brisbane.

But he was aggrieved by the dismissal and the blow smarted for years.

A leak of his testimony during his legal challenge againstCri­cket Australia painted the team as dysfunctio­nal and riven by a personalit­y clash between captain Clarke and vice captain Shane Watson.

He later described his coaching environmen­t as “suffocatin­g” in a book last year and said Lehmann was the ultimate benefactor of his dismissal, given the autonomy that Arthur said he personally craved but was never afforded.

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