Waikato Times

Stead, Malan vie for Black Caps coaching job

- Mark Geenty Stuff

Two of New Zealand Cricket’s most successful domestic coaches are set to fight out the race to be Mike Hesson’s successor.

Canterbury’s Gary Stead and Central Stags’ Heinrich Malan are the last men standing for the Black Caps coaching job, understand­s, with final interviews scheduled this week.

It means Scotland and former New Zealand A and Northern Districts coach Grant Bradburn has missed out, along with Auckland’s Mark O’Donnell, who is off to the Caribbean Premier League to coach the Jamaica Tallawahs.

Stead has long appeared the favourite to get the nod, but it seems he is being run close by Malan, a South African who took over the Stags in 2013, and impressed a lot of the right people.

The selection panel who narrowed it down to the final two is a powerful one — NZC chief executive David White, current test gloveman B J Watling, former Black Cap Luke Ronchi, Wellington coach and former national selector and test opener Bruce Edgar, NZC board member Don Mackinnon and general manager high performanc­e, Bryan Stronach.

A former White Ferns coach who took them to the 2009 World Cup final and spent time in the Black Caps set-up last summer, Stead guided Canterbury to Plunket Shield titles in 2014, 2015 and 2017, while Malan’s Stags made the Twenty20 and 50-over finals in the past year, before hoisting the Plunket Shield themselves in April.

An excellent technical coach, Malan is seen as a methodical planner in the Hesson mould, who evolved his methods in his five years in New Zealand.

He could point to the developmen­t of Stags’ players into the internatio­nal arena, with spinner Ajaz Patel his latest Black Caps squad call-up.

The question around Malan is whether it is too soon for him, after NZC was forced into a selection process a year earlier than expected.

Stead, a five-test Black Caps batsman, could point to his success with Canterbury and familiarit­y with the NZC system, but will need to convince the panel around his man management and leadership style, which is said to be more heavily structured and ‘‘black and white’’ than Hesson’s.

Edgar and former bowling coach Shane Bond both would have been strong contenders, but didn’t apply, due to the huge time commitment required under the job’s current structure.

 ??  ?? Heinrich Malan
Heinrich Malan
 ??  ?? Gary Stead
Gary Stead

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