'No agenda, just honesty' - Hesson defends assesment of senior players
"What I have alluded to is the way the modern game is played and the strike rates required, particularly in good conditions"
Shashank Kishore
11-Sep-2025 • 2 hrs ago
Mike Hesson: "Just because you like a player or have a relationship with a player, it doesn't mean you can't be honest" • AFP/Getty Images
Halfway through his press conference ahead of Pakistan's Asia Cup opener against Oman on Friday, coach Mike Hesson was asked where he got the "courage" to openly comment about Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam's shortcomings.
Slightly taken aback by the question, Hesson asked for it to be repeated. This time, the question was toned down and Hesson's response was measured.
"Being honest about your assessment of players is pretty important," Hesson said. "Coming from a place where you have no agenda is also very important. Looking at things objectively is important. I haven't talked about anyone's frailties.
"What I have alluded to is the way the modern game is played and the strike rates required, particularly in good conditions. All players ask for from coaches is to be honest with them. That is the responsibility you've got. Just because you like a player or have a relationship with a player, it doesn't mean you can't be honest."
Having tackled that topic, Hesson was asked whether he is confident about Pakistan's batting. Was Mohammad Haris their best bet in the lower order? Why were Saim Ayub and Sahibzada Farhan inconsistent, and Mohammad Nawaz not doing well? Do Pakistan's batters struggle to pick spinners from the hand? The context was the challenge of Varun Chakravarthy and Kuldeep Yadav, when Pakistan play India in Dubai on Sunday.
"I don't know where that has come from," Hesson said about the perceived struggle against spin. "We have played against Rashid [Khan] and Noor [Ahmed]. We have played against possibly the best wrist-spin attack in the world [in the tri-series final on Sunday] on a [Sharjah] surface that has spun square and managed to score 75 more runs than the opposition. I'm not sure where that has come from."
Hesson then addressed the question about Pakistan's young batting line-up.
"It is very much a developing batting line-up," he said. "There are a number of batters who can win you the game on their day, but they don't have as many good days as you'd like at the moment. That is very fair. The thing for us is the sum of the parts as a batting group.
"Every game bar one in Sharjah, we were probably 20 runs above par. Even though there are a number of players who didn't do well on particular occasions, I'm more interested in what we end up with and how we get there. In the tri-series final, we got 140 when 120 was plenty on the pitch."
Then he was inevitably asked about being part of the great spectacle - India v Pakistan - as a coach for the first time. "Look I've certainly watched many games from afar with other teams or while commentating," Hesson said. "Being part of a highly-charged event is going to be exciting. From my perspective, just like anytime you enter the final of a world event or whatever, it is about keeping everybody focused on the job at hand. That will be no different.
"We know India are obviously hugely confident and rightfully so. But we are very much focused on improving as a team day-by-day and not getting ahead of ourselves. We are well aware of the challenge of the task ahead and we are certainly looking forward to it."
Mike Hesson has thrown his weight behind Pakistan's 'developing' batting order•Getty Images
Pakistan have had a solid lead-in to the Asia Cup, having played five games over 12 days during the tri-series against Afghanistan and UAE in Sharjah. While the players had a day off on Thursday, Hesson had a close look at the pitch at the Dubai International Stadium.
"This is very different to Sharjah in terms of the abrasiveness of the grass," Hesson said. "We are playing on the same surface as the India vs UAE game. We have got the balance in the squad to deal with it. We have got plenty of multi-skilled players which gives us a bit of flexibility.
"I don't think this pitch is going to spin as much as Sharjah. And even yesterday [India v UAE match], when Kuldeep bowled, it didn't spin a huge amount. But when you have wristspinners, the surface doesn't matter as much.
"The beauty of our side is we have got fine spinners. We have got Mohammad Nawaz, who has been ranked No. 1 since coming back into the side six months ago. And obviously we've got Abrar [Ahmed] and Sufiyan [Muqeem] do as well as they have. Saim Ayub is in the top 10 allrounders in the world and Salman Agha has hardly bowled.
"We have got five seamers as well, which allow us to go for either air speed, change of pace or reverse swing depending on what the surface will provide."
Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo