CMJ: Proud Lloyd looks ahead (7 Sep 1998)
ANY suggestion that David Lloyd would resign as England coach and return permanently to the safer side of the microphone was removed at Lord's yesterday when he confirmed that he was looking forward to accompanying the touring teams to Bangladesh and
07-Sep-1998
7 September 1998
Proud Lloyd looks ahead
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
ANY suggestion that David Lloyd would resign as England coach and
return permanently to the safer side of the microphone was
removed at Lord's yesterday when he confirmed that he was looking
forward to accompanying the touring teams to Bangladesh and
Australia.
But it is clear that he wanted time to think about his position
following his strong public reprimand by the England and Wales
Cricket Board last week.
This man of passion and principle feels deflated and let down by
the suggestion, made in advance of last week's hearing by Richard
Peel, the head of the ECB's corporate affairs, that veiled
comments about the legality of Muttiah Muralitharan's action and
a subsequent argument with Geoff Boycott might amount to a
sackable offence.
That he took some time before denying a story that he was
pondering resignation suggests a certain resentment at the
strongly critical statement made in advance of his hearing and at
the way the inquiry was conducted. If it was not officially a
disciplinary hearing, the presence of the board's chief
executive, Tim Lamb, and the personnel manager, must have made it
look like much more than an opportunity for the coach to give his
side of the story.
Lloyd, who has been heartened by messages of support, may well
feel that he has been used by the ECB to assuage Sri Lankan
sensibilities, although that would not have been necessary if he
had kept his own counsel.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)