'Afghanistan are here to win' - Phil Simmons
Phil Simmons, the Afghanistan head coach, on what makes his team a success and what work remains to be done to take the next step up
Phil Simmons talks to the West Indies side during a training session • WICB Media Photo/Philip Spooner
We are more nervously excited because of how important the tournament is, and because of where we want to be as a team. The nervousness comes from that. The excitement comes from just being in this competition.
To correct one thing, we are not the favourites. The West Indies have to be the favourites because they are the big team. As I keep saying, there are other teams involved: you don't take Netherlands lightly, you don't take Ireland lightly, you don't take Zimbabwe lightly. You go far as down as not taking Nepal lightly. Having said that, the numbers are there. It is brilliant for players to have all those numbers. [But] the numbers don't do much when we get to competition day.
It was brilliant. It was not just the win. It was the way we won - that has boosted our confidence a lot and told us we have been playing good cricket. It was part of the growing excitement coming into this tournament.
We won the first match easily, but then we lost the second match heavily. Coincidentally, the score was exactly the same. In the third ODI, we lifted our game, and, when were on top, we did not let Zimbabwe come back. That gave me a lot of hope and a lot of understanding that this Afghanistan team has the potential to do that to other teams too.
"To correct one thing, we are not the favourites. The West Indies have to be the favourites because they are the big team"
The main takeaway for me is that if you chalk out things the right way for them, they can improve and improve quickly. Things weren't in a good place structure-wise when Afghanistan played Ireland [in the ODI series in December, which Ireland won 2-1] where it went haywire. So what we are trying to do is to make sure things are structured in a way that we can move forward.
During the Ireland series, there was no head coach in place. Speaking to the players I gathered that there was a lot of relaxation [in the dressing room] after the win in the first ODI. Ireland came back and won the series 2-1. That is what I mean by that structure. You win a game in a series and then you have to push yourself to the next level to make sure that the other team does not come back. It is little things like that we, the coaching staff, are working on with the players.
Afghanistan's bowling is their out-and-out strength. With the likes of Rashid and now Mujeeb Zadran in the line-up, it is a headache for most teams.
Yes, it has been wet, but again we have played in series where there has been dew in the night and Afghanistan have done well. Adaptation is the big thing, and we are trying to work on that aspect, that is going to be the big test for us.
It was my decision [to elect to bat in the warm-up against Netherlands]. I just wanted to bat first because in the last three matches in Sharjah, we fielded first. So I just wanted a little change, so that we get accustomed to doing both. Now that we have done both, we understand what needs to be done depending on whether we bat or field first.
"Controlled anger, controlled emotion, I think those are big things we have to work on."
Every department is a work in progress, but the progress seems to be happening a little bit quicker than I anticipated, so I'm very happy with that. As far as the batsmen are considered, I have asked everyone to focus on his own strengths. If my strength is to hit the ball over the top, that is what I must do; if my strength is accumulating and sweeping and reverse-sweeping, I must use that to my advantage. Each of us has a strength and we must use that during the match - that is my message. Everybody needs to be themselves because it is something about your play that brought you to the international level and made you successful, so you have to continue improving on that strength. Everybody can't play like [Virat] Kohli. Everybody can't play like a Viv Richards.
I like the fact that people outside perceive that, but I don't think that is true. Now we are getting to a stage where we have few youngsters that have graduated to the senior team. We now have Mujeeb too in the ranks, who is a class act in himself. I would like the other nine teams to continue having that [one-man team] perception about Rashid. It would make our job easier.
Rashid is tremendous. Just his understanding of his own game, his understanding of the game in itself and how he looks at the game and how he talks about it sitting on the sidelines; he thinks a lot about the game and he assesses the game really well. The biggest asset for us is all the players have tremendous respect for him. Not just for what he has done, but how he practices, how he goes about doing things on the field. That is why he is a leader.
Stanikzai is a lot better, but we are not going make a decision on him till Tuesday for the rest of the tournament. Rashid will lead in the first match.
One of things we have to work on is [mental] preparation and how we constantly put ourselves in a place where we can perform, but at the same time we have to keep that emotion in check and make sure that emotion helps. Controlled anger, controlled emotion, I think those are big things we have to work on.
We can only win this if we work hard and do the things that we worked on. We are not here to qualify. We are here to win.
Nagraj Gollapudi is a senior assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo