'We need to recover quicker than West Indies'
Steve Rixon, Australia's new fielding coach, talks about how they need to get back to the basics to become the world's top fielding outfit again

"I want to make players take ownership of a position" • Getty Images
It is. I've spoken to a lot of people who said, "It must have rejuvenated you a lot." I haven't needed any rejuvenation! I've been extremely rejuvenated wherever I've been involved, and have had plenty of success wherever I've been involved.
If you go through the best sides of the past, whether it's the Windies in the 80s, through to the cream of the crop with Australia, we've had some outstanding fielding teams. You can see the English now have upped the ante with their fielding, and it's standing out. I've noticed the Indians are starting to hit the deck more often, and they've become better. Everyone has eventually realised that you can't have a passenger in the field anymore. To me, it's always been an important part. You can walk into any organisation and really not know whether someone is going to go out and get a hundred or get five-for, but there's one thing you should always be assured of, if your preparation has been good, and that's that they make limited errors in the field, and maybe do something that might change the pattern of the game.
I don't think so. I won't say that. We've got some world-class fielders. Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke and Michael Hussey - they're three of the older boys. That tells me there are a lot of youngsters that need to get back to some simple basics in the field like they do in the other aspects of their game. I have no question they are crying out to be helped, and I think they will improve. But we're definitely not leading the way in the fielding anymore.
"A lot of people will field for hours, and eventually they'll walk off when they've had the worst quarter hour of fielding of the whole time they were out there. You gain nothing out of that. You stop when you're on top of your game"
I think that's a very good summation. I have seen some of the domestic games, and there is the odd standout, but it does need a new level brought into state cricket. They've fallen off the pace quite a bit there. We need to be much more consistent and realise that every opportunity that comes could be the changing of the game. It is a reflection on our domestic game, which is a bit sad, because that has been without question the strength of Australian cricket. Our grade sides have been strengthened by the fact that we've had a lot of state players go back to grade cricket on occasions. That lifts the standard, as does Test cricketers coming back and playing state cricket. If we're looking at getting that standard to a higher level, we're certainly going to have to do that.
I've seen some games where the fielding is very, very good, and I've seen some games where the intensity level is down. Your intensity level comes from your preparation. If you prepare and train smart, you'll probably find you've got a little bit of an edge. It's not by accident those three older guys I talked about [Ponting, Hussey and Clarke] turned out to be very good fielders. They're all quite athletic, but [the more important question is] who does that little bit extra from a young age all the way through? These guys have done the extra work.
I remember only too vividly turning a group of guys in New Zealand into arguably the best slips cordon I've seen, outside of anything Australia have produced. We had [Adam] Parore, [Stephen] Fleming, [Nathan] Astle and [Bryan] Young, and I can't remember them dropping any more than about five catches collectively in all the games that we had. So we did have something special. We had to, because we didn't have the bowling power or the batting power to compete with a lot of nations. That single-handedly kept us in a lot of these games.
I've been working with Brad Haddin for seven or eight years, so nothing will change there, except that I'll be around more often. Hadds and myself have had a special relationship for a long, long time and that's never waned. I'll certainly be doing my work with him and [Tim] Painey. It's something I really enjoy doing. The slips cordon is something I'll be doing a lot of work on.
They [Cricket Australia] came to me asking the questions, I didn't go chasing the job. I've never taken a coaching job and committed to anything like three or four years. I back myself to do two years and then reassess. Let's see how it goes for two tours and see if it's the sort of thing I would like to continue with - I'll be very surprised if it isn't. IPL is very much part of my life at the moment, with the Chennai Super Kings. They've been extremely good to me, so I've said from day one that that will be a priority. The idea of the shorter term is as much for me as it is for Cricket Australia.
Most definitely. With 20-odd years of coaching and 15 years as a player, I'd be very surprised if they didn't want to hear from a new set of eyes around the place. If I was a coach and had someone new come in, I'd be all over him. I'd want honesty out of him and I'd want him to tell me as he sees it, because that's the only way you move forward. As Michael [Clarke] and Tim [Nielsen] know, I'll be very happy to be honest with what I see. It's not about individuals, this is about a group going together and trying to get Australia back on track, to get away from ever looking at fifth position on a Test table ever again. We don't want to ever be seen or thought of in the same breath as, say, West Indies after their reign at the top of the tree. We need to recover quicker than anything West Indies have done.
That's the only part I really do know without any apprehension. I look at what we've got in our youngsters, throw in your mix of senior players, and we have the ability to get back on top of things very quickly - albeit we will be taking things in small steps, looking at the fourth position before we look at first. We want to be tracking to that first position, but that may take a little bit of time. We definitely have the quality of players in Australia, no question about that.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo