Kashmir Observer

It Was Hostile Environmen­t In Ahmedabad: Mickey Arthur

-

KARACHI: Mickey Arthur, Pakistan's former team director, admitted that the ODI World Cup match against India at Ahmedabad was one of the toughest moments during his stint, taking the side through a hostile environmen­t.

Arthur moved on after Pakistan failed to reach the semifinals of the showpiece event last year, while former all-rounder Mohammed Hafeez replaced him in the role.

"It was extremely tough not having any Pakistan support. The one thing that really drives the Pakistan team is the incredible support they receive at grounds and hotels. Here we never had that, and that was quite tough in a World Cup, particular­ly for the players,” Arthur was quoted as saying by the ‘Wisden’.

“As you can imagine it was a tough, hostile environmen­t in Ahmedabad. But we were expecting this, and to their credit our players never moaned or complained once. They cracked on and tried their best – neverthele­ss it ultimately does play a role in motivation when you can't see or hear that support base around you,” he added.

Pakistan's World Cup campaign was as usual marked by high-level off-field turbulence, including news about dressing room discord and leaked WhatsApp conversati­ons of then skipper Babar Azam.

However, Arthur said all those outside commotions never really affected the team.

“The outside noise with Pakistan is incredible, you just have to check your Twitter feed to see so many fires that are ignited out there, that have absolutely no truth attached to them,” he said.

“You end up – and I found this out the first time – you're just constantly extinguish­ing those fires and chasing your tail. What we knew within our team was our game plan, and the defined roles that the players had, and we cracked on with it. There were unequivoca­lly no massive disagreeme­nts with the players,” Arthur added.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India