It's a coach's life
Andrew Miller traces the recently fluctuating fortunes of John Buchanan and Duncan Fletcher
Andrew Miller
21-Feb-2007
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At the very moment of Australia's third defeat of the Chappell-Hadlee
Trophy in Hamilton yesterday, the cameras panned - like the ghouls
that they are - to the balcony of the visitors' dressing-room, where
the coach, John Buchanan, was bookishly scribbling his final notes of
a chastening trip across the Tasman. After the fortnight he has
endured, the man they call Ned Flanders was probably just filling out
a final string of ho-diddly-hums before dumping the entire portfolio
in the shredder.
"The batting efforts of our opposition are not assisting the
development of our bowlers' one-day skills," were just a few of the
many words Buchanan had uttered at the midpoint of the CB Series, a
long-forgotten era when Australia were lords of all they surveyed, and
England and New Zealand were mere timorous serfs at the banquet. Six
defeats have since followed from their last seven matches - Australia's
worst run of ODI form in a decade - and it's safe to say those skills
have now been tested to breaking point.
Hubris, they call it. Exaggerated pride or self-confidence, often
resulting in fatal retribution. It was a crime in Ancient Greece, and
it's still a crime in the eyes of Buchanan's critics, both at home and
away. Shane Warne, who memorably suggested that the role of the coach
was to drive the players from the hotel to the ground, this week
elbowed his way to the head of a long queue of detractors, and pinned
the blame for Australia's failings firmly on a man whom he believes
has been a passenger throughout the team's unprecedented era of
success.
Somewhere on the other side of the world, enjoying some family time in
Cape Town no doubt, Duncan Fletcher will doubtless be permitting
himself a wry grin at the chain of events of the past few days. Two
weeks ago, there was only one international coach with his head in the
crosswires, and it wasn't the man who had just delivered a 5-0 Ashes
whitewashing in his final Test series. But then, at the eleventh hour
of the tour, Fletcher spirited up some last-minute silverware to
salvage his reputation, just as Buchanan steered his farewell cruise
onto the rocks.
It's a coach's life. As a convoluted southern summer draws to a close,
we're left to reflect on the successes and failures of two of the most
dissimilar men of their genre - Buchanan the Nutty Professor and
Fletcher the Inscrutable Seer, whose differing methods have been both
utterly vindicated and hopelessly ridiculed this season, almost in the
same breath.
Of the two, there is no doubt that Buchanan looks the most naked in
defeat. He fell flat on his face after a solitary season at Middlesex
in 1998 because none of the players could penetrate his corporate
jargon, and in the 2005 Ashes he was ridiculed for having no answers
when Australia's bowlers started malfunctioning. "Where is your
bowling coach," everyone cried at Trent Bridge as no-ball followed
no-ball and basic disciplines disappeared through the side door (The
man they so needed, Troy Cooley, was in England's camp as it happens).
But perhaps that is exactly as it should be. A man should be at his
most vulnerable when there is something to be vulnerable about, and in
Buchanan's case that is, in fact, next to never. In his seven-year
tenure, he has presided over an incredible 69 Test wins out of 90, and
24 series wins out of 28. Of the four rubbers that got away, only two
ended up in outright defeat - and these were two of the greatest
series of all time, against India in 2000-01 and, of course, the
Ashes.
Of course, in an era where no team has come close to challenging
Australia, Barney the Bear could probably have coached such
superlative charges, but Buchanan has been on hand to provide the
challenge himself. One day it's the witterings of Sun Tsu, the next
it's a pre-Ashes boot camp in the Queensland jungle. Warne certainly
wasn't convinced of his methods and nor, it would seem, was Ricky
Ponting. In the wake of the Ashes whitewash, Ponting attempted to
convey the gist of a team-talk that Buchanan had given during the
Sydney Test, but admitted as his narrative tailed off that he had
"probably been asleep for most of it".
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But there is, of course, one final function of a coach, and arguably
it is the most important of all. He is the team scapegoat, the man
upon whom the brickbats rain down when the results start to go awry.
Fletcher played this role to perfection when Nasser Hussain and
Michael Vaughan were his captains, lurking in the shadows when the
going was good but quick to step forward on his designated "Duncan
Days". But having failed to forge the same bond when Andrew Flintoff
was in charge, he abandoned his duty all too readily and left the
captain to utter the same unconvincing platitudes day after day after
day.
Buchanan is now also right in the firing line, and given the litany of injuries,
retirements, paternity breaks and general weariness that is afflicting
his team at present, he couldn't really be better positioned.
"The decision-making that accompanies being placed under the
microscope of competition," was another thing that Buchanan wanted his
bowlers to be tested on in these recent contests. Nathan Bracken, for
one, is probably very grateful that everyone is still preoccupied with
working out what this means.
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Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo