'It's now about gaining respect as a leader'
Fresh from the success of his first series as captain, Michael Clarke speaks about the challenges ahead of him as the first Australian leader since Allan Border to be handed a middling team

"Now is an opportunity for me to get home and have a really good think about what's happened over the last 12 months" • Getty Images
You'd have to ask a few of the other players, but I think from my side it was very enjoyable. I certainly feel like I've got the support and respect as a player because I've played a lot of international cricket. For me it's about now gaining that respect as a captain, and I guess the foremost way to do that is to have some success on the field. Now is an opportunity for me to get home and have a really good think about what's happened over the last 12 months and where I see this team going over the next 12-24 months, and how we can have some targets we try to achieve.
I think our communication has been great through the series. In the final game he might have just come to me at that time to throw up an idea, but I think throughout the series he'd done that. If there's been something he's thought is worth a go, he's thrown that idea up - as a lot of the guys have. Ricky's knowledge and experience, not only as a player but as a leader, is something this team really needs at the moment. And it certainly helps me. For me it's about using everybody I have around me. Whether you've played 350 one-dayers or 10, I think we've got a lot of knowledge in the group, and natural talent.
It's certainly been nice to get some runs after a tough summer, a tough Ashes campaign. It was obviously very disappointing for me not to make anywhere near as many runs as I'd have liked. So to come back in those one-dayers against England and have some success, not only with the bat but the team winning, and leading the team in that series... Then I thought I performed pretty well throughout the World Cup, and then to make some runs here has been nice as well. I still think there are areas of my game that need a lot of improvement and I've got this time now to really work hard on my game. That was a big part of standing down from the Twenty20 stuff after the Ashes - to give me more time to focus on one-day cricket and Test cricket, because I've got a lot of improvement to achieve as an individual player and also now as the captain.
The England bowlers certainly deserve a lot of credit. They bowled really well to all of us, the whole top order. As a batsman the hardest part about batting is starting, your first 10-15 runs. Defence has always been an important part of my game, whether in Test cricket or one-day cricket. I need to continue to work on that and make sure my technique's in order, to give me a solid base, to have a solid defence.
I think the innings where I batted the best was the second innings at Lord's [in 2009]. That's the best I've ever hit a cricket ball for a whole innings.
I think it is important to lead from the front. Probably one of the things Ricky has taught me is that as a leader, as a senior player, and certainly as the captain, you need to be scoring runs as a batsman. I'm now the captain and I want to make sure I'm leading from the front.
We've certainly got a lot of talent with the ball. No doubt we continue to look at ways to keep getting teams out. Unfortunately for a while now we haven't been able to bowl teams out in Test cricket as often as we'd like. But we've just got to keep getting better. There's plenty of talent there.
I think you have to, as a captain. You need to put yourself in the bowler's shoes as much as possible, especially spin. I think you need to communicate as much as you can with the spin bowler to get the best fields - understand what he's trying to do and set fields accordingly. In my mind I've always been a batsman who has bowled, but yeah I played first grade at 16 as a bowler and batted at No. 8. So I've always enjoyed bowling; it's no different now. In this series I had two better spinners in front of me in Xavier Doherty and Steve Smith. And it was a good opportunity to give those guys a good crack. I'll continue to bowl when the time is right.
It was tough during the Ashes summer as well, because we were playing such a big series and obviously our goal was to win that series, so we tried a few things. Injury played a part as well. Looking forward, I'm pretty confident the selectors will pick a spin bowler and stick with that guy. Guys are still injured at the moment so I'm not sure who they'll go for. But whoever they pick, they'll give him a good chance in Sri Lanka, and then we go to South Africa after that. So hopefully they'll bowl well and get a crack at both series, and stay in the team for a long time. The one thing we need to remember, though, is we're never going to get another Shane Warne. He's one of a kind, and I think [in terms of] the expectation we have with our spin bowlers, things have changed. We certainly haven't got Warney, but I do believe spin bowling will play a huge part in Australian cricket's success going forward.
I certainly think he's still one of the best fielders in the world at the moment. More than that, I see a good opportunity for the young blokes now to learn from someone like Punter, because he is such a great fielder, and I'm confident they will over time. We've got some really good athletes, really good fielders. It's just about hard work and actually getting on the training paddock and doing as much as you can. Catching a lot of balls, throwing a lot of balls at your targets, and making fielding a priority. That's something I'll be pushing, especially when we get to camp [in Coolum] in July. That's a good time for us to really focus hard on our fielding and make sure that when we get an opportunity in the game, we need to be taking that one-handed catch or hitting the stumps.
It's about creating opportunities. Direct hit run-outs, you get them every now and then, but it's more creating that run-out, doing something in the field - a great bit of fielding, a good catch, that energy and bubble, the support you get behind your bowler. That's certainly a big part of why we've had success over a long period.
I don't think that's going to happen in the near future, that's for sure!
For both sides, Twenty20 is great for cricket. The Big Bash is going to be fantastic for Australian cricket, and we've already seen the development of so many young players through playing in the IPL or playing in the Big Bash. They have grown so much. One thing I love most about tournaments like that is, it is up to each individual to make a decision on what they think they need, what they want to do and where their body's at. I've said openly I'd love to take part in the IPL at some stage. I'd love to play in the Big Bash at some stage. It's just about assessing where you're at individually. Right now this break is so important for me, not only for my body and for my mind, but planning for Australian cricket as well going forward, and to work really hard on my game.
Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo