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‘IT IS ABOUT BEING CLEAR ABOUT WHAT WE ARE TRYING TO ACHIEVE’

▶ Ahead of his first official tour in charge of UAE, Dougie Brown talks to Paul Radley

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Dougie Brown has big plans for UAE cricket. So much so, he struggles to downplay his ambitions, despite trying his best.

“It is about being clear about what we are trying to achieve as a country,” Brown cautions, in an interview before his first series in permanent charge, against the Netherland­s this week.

“I know what that is. Stating now would probably be the wrong thing to do.”

So he does not want to make any grand statements. And then his voracious enthusiasm for the task at hand leads him to do just that.

He wants the national team to be the world’s No 1 side beyond the Test sphere. He wants to see UAE players featuring in the leading Twenty20 leagues around the globe. And he wants to be a challenge for the top nations who come to tour the Emirates.

That is all. No biggie. “What is realistic? There is no point us setting out to be looking to play Test cricket in the next three years,” Brown says. “That is not just going to happen.

“Could we be the No 1 Associate team in cricket in the next three years? Yes, we could. Can we be in a position to have our players going off to play in major tournament­s around the world? We have seen Chirag Suri do it. “He didn’t play any cricket, but there are other ones who could go away and play, whether it be Big Bash, CPL [Caribbean Premier League], BPL [Bangladesh Premier League], or IPL [Indian Premier League]. We have players who are good enough to do that.”

To say the former England internatio­nal is excited about the long-term project with UAE cricket undersells the point.

He sold his home in the UK ahead of moving to Dubai this summer. Even before that, when he was only filling the breach temporaril­y while the Emirates Cricket Board prevaricat­ed over making a full-time appointmen­t, his commitment to the role was impressive.

He missed his youngest daughter’s second birthday (although he was not wholly downcast by the fact that meant skipping a trip to a theme park), while overseeing preparatio­ns for the series against Papua New Guinea.

Now he is hungry to start cementing the progress he put in place with the national team during that initial – and highly successful – three-month stint. “It was short-term aim, now it is a long-term expectatio­n,” the Scotsman says.

Suri’s unexpected elevation to the ranks of cricket’s biggest competitio­n, the IPL, is a good starting point.

Brown wants the players to believe they can do the same, and earn for themselves the type of experience­s that have previously been beyond players from this country.

Individual ambition, Brown says, is only achievable by way of collective success.

“We need to be a good side, primarily,” he says. “Nobody is going to look at players within a team if you are not competing as a team.

“We know there is a bigger picture. We want to aspire to be the No 1-ranked Associate team in the world over the next period of time.

“By doing that, because of the geography of where we are, we will get the opportunit­y, which other Associates won’t do, and that is to compete against the Full Member teams on a more regular basis.

“If we do, we need to make sure we are putting in solid performanc­es against them. I know we can, it is just a case of working to that point.”

The side’s first official engagement under their new coach is three 50-over matches against a Netherland­s side ranked first in the World Cricket League. The UAE are last-placed in the eightteam competitio­n.

These matches do not count towards the WCL, and the home side are without three of their most noted first-class players, Roelof van der Merwe, Timm van der Gugten and Michael Rippon.

For Brown, the series represents the start of a new chapter for the game in the UAE.

“We have to start somewhere,” Brown said. “We have started. We have been on a good little journey over the past few months. The players have bought in to the management’s vision of what we want from the team.

“It is really important we revisit that vision, and say, ‘What can we achieve? You as a player will benefit as an individual if we do well as a team.’

“It is a slightly different way of looking at it to the intrinsic, slightly selfish way of looking at it as a player. But you will get recognitio­n if we manage to buy ourselves recognitio­n as a team.”

It is really important we revisit that vision, and say ‘What can we achieve?’

 ?? Satish Kumar / The National ?? Dougie Brown’s goal for the UAE is simple. ‘We need to be a good side, primarily,’ he says
Satish Kumar / The National Dougie Brown’s goal for the UAE is simple. ‘We need to be a good side, primarily,’ he says

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