Coventry Telegraph

Farbrace: Now I want to help deliver a lot more glory for this great club

- Paul Farbrace

internatio­nal cricket, to be involved at the top level for so long was way beyond expectatio­ns. “But every coaching job has its shelf life. This is the right time for a new direction and I am thrilled to be joining Warwickshi­re.

“Every time I have been to Edgbaston with England in recent years it has been a fantastic experience. The atmosphere for England games is always amazing, led by the Hollies Stand on a Saturday afternoon, and you always feel you are really playing at home there.

“The stadium is one of the best in the world with great facilities and a lot of great people working there. “By the time I spoke to (Warwickshi­re chief executive) Neil Snowball about the job, a lot of the selling had already been done by my visits to Edgbaston over the years. “To have it as a home ground, and to be given a chance to help write the next chapter of the history of this club, is just a fantastic opportunit­y. I have had conversati­ons with other counties but this was too good to turn down. An opportunit­y like this might not come up again.”

As sport director, Farbrace will work closely with women & girls performanc­e manager Laura MacLeod, elite cricket developmen­t manager Paul Greetham, cricket operations manager Keith Cook and head groundsman Gary Barwell, as well as men’s first-team coach Jim Troughton and his team of Graeme Welch, Tony Frost and Ian Westwood.

“The Bears’ men’s team coaching staff have all won trophies with Warwickshi­re – they are winners and that is a vital ingredient,” said Farbrace. “I’m really looking forward to working with them and Laura in the women’s game to deliver more success for Warwickshi­re. It is a big club which should be challengin­g for trophies in all formats and that’s what we will aim to do.”

Farbrace will arrive with immense coaching credential­s, which he gathered after a playing career of just 40 first-class matches for Kent and Middlesex. His final appearance in senior cricket was actually at Edgbaston, for Middlesex in a rain-affected AXA Equity & Law League match in 1995.

His only first-class encounter at Edgbaston had arrived four years earlier – and proved a bruising experience, literally.

Facing a Bears’ attack, including Allan Donald, Gladstone Small, Tim Munton (who took a career-best eight for 89 in the match) and Paul Smith, Farbrace joined the long list of batsmen to retire hurt courtesy of a rapid missile from A.D.

“I remember it well,” he said. “When you get hit on the arm by Allan Donald you don’t forget it in a hurry. I retired hurt and it was pretty sore but Mike Gatting, who was not playing in the match but club captain, sent me back out again at No.11 to try to bat the game out with a towel wrapped around my arm.

“Keith Piper had got injured too so I remember Asif Din was keeping wicket. Keeping to A.D probably wasn’t much fun for Asif but facing him with one good arm was definitely no fun.

“And it wasn’t just Allan – with Small and Munton that was a brilliant attack. I know how proud the club is of the success that team brought to Warwickshi­re in the ‘90s. Now I want to help deliver a lot more success for this great club.”

To be given a chance to help write the next chapter of the history of this club is just a fantastic opportunit­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom