Wasim is the man for Old Trafford (5 Sep 1996)
AT THE end of last season Yorkshire announced they would search the world for a major figure who could fill the post of team manager
05-Sep-1996
6 September 1996
Wasim is the man for Old Trafford
Pakistan captain is better bet than any manager, says Brian
Bearshaw
AT THE end of last season Yorkshire announced they would
search the world for a major figure who could fill the post
of team manager.
They found nobody. Four former Yorkshire captains were on the
list but no major figure, and certainly not the man on the
minds of many, Allan Border.
Now Lancashire have thrown wide their net in the search for a
head coach, a motivator, "preferably with international
experience". Border`s name has been tossed around Old Trafford,
too, along with those of Ian Botham, Graham Gooch and just about
anybody else who is anybody in the game.
The thinking, as at Yorkshire, is that a top player, an
outstanding captain, would make a successful county coach, though
there is hardly any evidence to support this view.
John Stanworth, who was appointed acting coach at the
beginning of the season when David Lloyd was recruited by
England, has been told that a head coach will be appointed for
next year, but his own senior coaching position at Old Trafford
will continue.
"Stanworth has done a super job," said chairman Bob Bennett,
"but we`re looking for someone with international
experience, someone who in the longer run can stamp his
authority in the dressing room."
The inference is clear. Stanworth, who played 44 first-team
matches for the county between 1983 and 1992, could have problems
with Lancashire`s hive of strong personalities, including six
Test players.
Yet it is the captain whose authority has been supreme through
the years, not just at Old Trafford, but at just about every
other county. Yorkshire, who have scoured the world, have left
David Byas in charge this summer. And he has done just fine.
Lancashire should have little need to look outside for
authority in a dressing room which next year will contain the
captain of Pakistan as well as the captain of England. Mike
Atherton is not interested in being Lancashire`s captain while
he leads England. But what greater authority could there be in
the dressing room than that of Wasim Akram?
If Lancashire want respect and control in the dressing room
they do not have to search the world. They have it in Wasim, one
of the most respected figures in the game. His appointment as
captain would not only save Lancashire money, it would allow them
to rethink and define the role of coach in positive, practical
terms.
When Leicestershire were searching for somebody to provide
fresh impetus in 1990, they first went for Ray Illingworth,
who refused, then signed Australia coach Bobby Simpson, a man
with an unquestionable pedigree. As Wisden said: "The talents
that guided Australia to their Ashes triumph in 1989 did not
translate to running an English county side."
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph